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THE WILD RICK GATHERERS OF THE UPPER LAKES
A STUDY IX AMKIIK'AX I'Hl.MITIVK ECONOMICS
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WASHINGTON
OOVKU- rlMXTINC
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THE WILD RICE GATHERERS OF THE UPPER LAKES
A STUDY IN AMERICAN PRIMITIVE ECONOMICS
BY
ALBERT ERNEST JETSTKK Th. T>.,
Axxixttnit I'.lliiinld/jixl BUHEAI: OK AMERICAN KTHNOIAMIY, .SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, WANIIINCTON, ]). C.
A THESIS SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OP PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN, 1899
KXTRAOT FROM THK NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
WASHINGTON
GOVKHXMKNT PRINTING OFFICE
1 11 II 1
THE WILD RICE GATHERERS OF THE UPPER LAKES
A STUDY IN AMERICAN PRIMITIVE ECONOMICS
BY
ALBERT ERNEST JENKS
1013
CONTENTS
Page 1019
CHAPTER I— Botany 1021
Scientific names 1021
Popular synonyms 1022
Etymology (if ///« //</////// 1024
Scientific description 1025
Popular de-script ion 1025
Natural enemies 1026
CH APTEK II — Habitat 1028
Introduction 1028
Habitat according to States 1028
Habitat in the- wild-rice district 1033
Foreign habitat 1036
CHAPTEK III — Indians 1038
The Oj ibwu 1038
The Dakota 1043
The Menomini 1047
The Sauk and Fox 1050
The Winnebago 1051
The Potawatomi 1053
The Maskotin 1053
The Assiniboin 1054
The Kickapoo, Ottawa and Huron 1055
CHAPTER IV — Production 1056
Introduction 1056
S. iwing and other early care 1057
Tying 1058
Gathering 1001
Curing and drying 1064
Thrashing 1066
Winnowing 1070
Storing 1071
Property-right in wild rice 1072
Amount!- of wild rice harvested 1073
CHAPTER V — Consumption 1080
Nutrition 1080
Ways of preparing wild rice for food 1083
Periods of consumption 1086
CHAPTER VI — General social and economic interpretations 1089
The wild-rice moon 1089
Wild rice in ceremonials and in mythology as found in Indian traditions. 1090
Dependence of the Indian on wild rice 1095
Dependence of the white man on wild rice 1101
Indian population of the wild-rice district 1106
1015
Kill', CONTENTS
Page.
CH vi-n:i: VII— Influence of wild rice oa L-eo^raplnV nomenclature 1115
lutn iduction 1115
tions ..I country 1 1 ill
Cities, stations, etc 1117
Itiver-. creeks, hike-, and ponds 1118
BlIll.IlMiKAl-IIY 1126
! c-nlMCI.^IMNDKM-- 1133
LIST <iK MAI'S .. 1136
TABLES
A. Statist! i -al view of wild ri.-c pnnlm-tion 1075
B. Value of wild rice per luishel 1078
.iiidard of life of wild rice produciiif.' Indians 107!»
I'. Composition of cereal- and Indian foods 1081
!•!. 11. iiiquet's estimate of Indian population in 17<i4 1108
F. Monroe's estimate of Indian j population in 177S 1100
( i. Pike's estimate of Indian population in the wild-rice district in 1806 1109
II. Katie, of warriors to whole tribe 1110
1. Kstimate of Indian population in 1822 1110
ILLUSTRATIONS
Page
PLATE LXVI. Wild rice habitat by States 1033
LXYII. a, Wild-rice bed in Lac Courte Oreille river; b, Ojibwa birch- bark and matting wigwam at the wild-rice field 1043
LXVIII. Permanent ash-bark wigwam of the wild rice gathering Ojibwa. 1049 LXIX. Portable birch-bark and rush-matting wigwam of the wild rice
gathering Ojibwa 1053
LXX. Indian woman on her way to the rice bed to tie the stalks 1056
LXXI. A narrow bed of wild rice tied in bunches or sheaves 1059
LXXII. Tied bunches of wild rice 1060
LXXIII. Birch-bark canoes of wild rice gathering Ojibwa 1065
LXXIV. u, Wild-rice field after the harvest; b, Drying rack for grain 1067
LXXV. <(, Section of drying rack; b, Stave-lined thrashing hole for
treading out the grain 1068
LXX VI. Wild-rice kernels before thrashing 1070
LXXVII. a, Thrashing wild rice by means of a churndasher-like stick;
b, Indian woman winnowing wild rice 1073
LXXVIII. Wild-rice kernels after thrashing and winnowing 1074
LXXIX. a, Birch-bark mococks in which the grain is carried; b. Birch- bark winnowing tray 1080
FIGURE 47. Sickle-shaped sticks used to draw the stalks within reach for tying. 1060
48. Map showing areas whose population is compared 1106
1017
THE WILD RICE GATHERERS OF THE UPPER LAKES
BY ALBERT ERNEST JENKS
INTRODUCTION
This memoir was begun with the hope that eventually other some- what similar studies of American primitive economics might be made which would throw light from an almost new direction on the culture status of the North American Indians. As the economic motive is so dominant among the foremost peoples of to-day, its ascendence must mark a new stage in the measurement of culture. It has been very interesting to find, through this study, three distinct steps in the development of the motive for production, beginning with myth- founded belief and rising to an incipient state of economic consider- ation. For example, the Menomini Indians absolutely refuse to sow wild rice — their motive is simply that of belief; the Dakota Indians do not sow the grain, but apparently have no myth-founded scruple against it; while among the Ojibwa no such belief seems likely ever to have existed, for they sow the grain from purely economic motive, though such motive is not so dominant as among many maize-producing tribes.
This study has helped to elucidate the culture position of the tribes which used wild rice by showing the motives for production, the effect on the Indian of such quantities of spontaneous vegetal food, the property-right in the rice beds, and the division of labor. It has given a deiaiiecl picture of aboriginal economic activity which is absolutely unique, and in which no article is employed not of aborig- inal conception and workmanship. It has thrown light upon the almost constant warfare between the Dakota and Ojibwa Indians for two hundred and fifty years. It has shed light also upon the fur trade in a territory unexcelled in the richness of its furs, yet almost inac- cessible had it not been for the wild rice which furnished such nour- ishing and wholesome support to the traders and Viiiniav* it nisn shows that much of history is wrapped up in native geographic names, and it is hoped that it may help to promote the preservation and retention of such terms. It has suggested new lines of manu- facture.
101!)
WILD KICK (iATHKKERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANS..O
I am indebted tn Professor Richard T. Ely. director, and to Professor William A. Scott and Professor Frederick .(. Turner", of the .school of economic-, political science, and history, of the University of Wis- consin, at Madison, where thi> study was made, for the suggestions and assistance usually given in the |)re])aration of such a thesis.
Most of the historical data was collected in the library of the Wis- consin Historical Society, at Madison. To Mr Kenben Gold Thwaites. secretary and superintendent, and to other members of the library stall', I owe much. By unusual favors and almost constant service tliev have greatly lessened my labors.
1 am also under obligation to Professor F. W. Woll, chemist of the experiment station at Madison, for his painstaking analysis showing the nutritive value of wild rice.
A part of the data was collected by correspondence, and I gladlv take this opportunity to thank those gentlemen whose names appear in the subjoined list of correspondents.
Hut most of all I am indebted to Prof essor W J McGee, ethnologist in charge of the Bureau of American Ethnology, and to Dr Otis T. Mason, of the I'nited States National Museum, both of whom suggested the .-subject of this study. Through correspondence and personal conferences Professor McGee has rendered valuable assist- ance. It is to him also that I owe the opportunity of visiting manv w'.ld rice producing Indians in the autumn of lcS!»!t, when I obtained additional data and the illustrations for this study.
I am aware that the text of this memoir carries a greater burden of facts than is necessary to prove the points of the thesis. Had the study been published simply as a doctor's thesis, many facts now in the text would have been omitted, or put in footnotes or appendices.
CHAPTER I BOTANY
SCIENTIFIC NAMES
During the early history of the >eience of botany the wild-rice plant, with which this memoir deals, received many scientific names. It is today known us /!:•<> H/<I <"/ mit '!<•(/. and is a grass belonging to the order UnniiiiiKi-. to the lesser tribe <>rijz«t'. to the genus Zi,~ni/iii. and to the species m/HHtirnS The word "zi/ania" appears in the New Testament in the Gospel according to Matthew, xiii, 25, 2(1. i'T. 2!». :-!o. where it is supposed to refer to lolium. The word is translated "tares." und the plant is there spoken of as growing in farming soil among the wheat.2 However, the plant under present discussion is aquatic, and there is no likeness between the two except in name.
The following table presents a list of various scientific synonyms by which the plant Zimni.a t/yuaf /''•</ has been known:3
Zitania — < imnovious, ex Linneus, Gen. ed., vol. 11 (17-12), p. 863.
.•.•/"'v ,''---P>enth;mi and Hooker, f. 3, p. 1115. * l'.li/nni.i — Mitchell, in Act. Phys. Med. A cad. Xat. Cur., vol. vm (1748), appendix,
p. '.'10.
:':*— Adams, l-'ain., vol. ir (17»i,Si, p. :;7.
llii'li-"/ii/i-iiin — Link; see Index Ucnc-rum Phanerogamorum (1888), p. 468. M,liiini,i — Link, oj>. cit.
hulli-i Asclirrs: Bee ludi'x < k'norum Phanerogamorum (1888), p. 468. '/r.nii'iii <i<in<itii'a — Linn., Mant., p. 2!i">.
Y.'i \imii i i-liirii.l<i.iii — Micheaux, Fl. Bor. Am., vol. I (1803), j>. 7">. Xi-jiniii I'jl'uMi — Herb, of Linn, (so marked, Imt nut by Linn.), Jour. Linn. Soc., vol. vi
(1862), ]>. W. *Kzania /<it<i<,i;<i— Tiirczaniiinw, Hull. Sue. Nat. >L S. (1825) 105; vol. xxix (1856),
number 1, p. 2. '/.i-.iiiiin iHilnitlfiit — Linn.. Mant., vol. u (1771), p. 295.
The Hydropymm esculentwm of Link is the r-anie as Z!.?«nia- aquatiai. It. is asserted4 that Z. latifuliii of Japan and eastern Russia is iden- tical with the North American /. n</iiiif!,;i, but Prof. J. Matsumura, of the Imperial University, Japan, writes that the American plant is identical with a plant growing in Japan, Formosa, and eastern China which bears the name '//i-nn'm nij/iuf!i;i.:'
1 F. Lamsiiii-srrilmrr in Bull. 7 nf tlu1 UivWnii nf ACTOstology, U. S. Department of Agriculture, cviM/.l .•<!.. Wasliiinrtcm. 1898.
-'William Darlington, Agricultural Botany, New York, 1847, p. 207. •''Those marked * have not been verified; they an.' t'rnm *. •cninlnry v,,in'cr<. 4 Kentham in .Icmnial of the Lininean Society, vol. XIX (1882), p. 54. M. Miltstimura. letter, Dee. Hi. lv>.
1021
1022 WILD RICE GATHERERS OB' UPPER LAKES [ETH.ASN.W
In America tin- plant under present consideration is ordinarily known as "wild rice." a term similar to the common names <>f several other American grasses. thus necessitating some care in distinction. The greatest confusion will arise, doubtless, with 7/i~nniii ,„/'/ /'</>•< u. the only other American plant of the same genus. This latter plant is verv common in the brackish waters of the southern states. It is some- times called "prolific rice." and is said to grow in shallow waters in Ohio and Wisconsin as well as in the south.1 Some confusion may arise also with plants of the same tribe, such as "little mountain rice" ( fJ/'t/:nj>xix ,.1'ii/ini). a slender perennial found among rocks and canyons and on mountain tops in Montana. \Vyomi ng, Utah, Oregon, and Wash ington:" "white mountain rice" (Oryzopais aetperfobia), also a slender perennial, found in the woods in Newfoundland, in eastern United States from Massachusetts and New Jersey to Minnesota, and in the Hockv mountains from British Columbia to New Mexico;8 "black mountain rice" (Oryzopsis mdanocarpd), also a perennial, which is reported as growing in open rocky w>ods in Quebec and Ontario, and to the south as far as Delaware. Kentucky. Missouri, and Minnesota;* "small-flowered mountain rice" (Ori/z<>]>x!x micrantha), a slender, erect perennial growing in woods, along river bluffs, and on mountain sides from South Dakota to Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona;6 and (trijzojtxix nixjfi'ilitii, which grows in dry prairies about Fort Rob- inson, Nebraska.6
POPULAR SYNONYMS
In America there arc four chief sources from which popular syn- onyms are derived for the plant under consideration, viz, the French, Knglish. Algonquian, and Siouan languages. Other synonyms arise through dialects and faulty spelling, and still others through ignorance of a foreign language. . Below is presented a list of tin svnonvms for the plant in America. Only one reference for each name is given: 7
Aii-wni-K.ui-XK-MK-Nd-Mix (Ojihwa of Grand Traverse bay) — Schoolcraft, Indian
Tribes, vol. n, p. 4ti.;.
AMKKICAN KICK — Nuttall, Genera of Xorth American Plants, vol. n, p. 210. AVKN-A FATI-A— Alex. Henry, Travels, p. l!41.
I'.I.Ai KBIKD OATS.
CANADIAN 0
CANADIAN KICK — Smith, Dictionary of Economic Plants.
C\\U>MV WILD KICK— CyrlojMMlia; or a NVw Universal Dictionary of Arts ami Sci-
f, Vol. XXXIX.
'('has. L. Fliiit.'inisscj, anil Kornnf Plants, Lincoln, 1890, pp. 29-30.
'Lamson-SrribiM-r, American Crasses, ], p. 11:), in Bull. 7 of the Division of Agrostology, U. S. Dept. f AKrirulture, revised <•.!. " I bid., p. 111. « Ibid. .p. no. •Ibid., p. 114.
• Bcswy ami Wcl.hcr. (irassesanil Forage Plants, Lincoln, 1890, p. 104. • tin: liiljliotrraphy fur thr i-oinpli^ic titles of the rrfiT.^n. . -.
JEXKS] POPULAR SYNONYMS ld'23
KSPECE DE SEIGLE DE MARAis — Relations des J6suites, 1671, Quebec, 1858, vol. in,
p. 3<i.
FALS AVOINES — Flint, Geography and History, vol. i, p. 84. FALSE OATS — Neill, History of Minnesota, p. 111. FATUIS A VENA — Flint, op. cit., p. 84.
KATSSE AVOINE— Relations des Je'suites, 1670, Quebec, 1858, vol. in, p. 92. FIELD RICE — House of Representatives, 54th Cong., 1st sess., Report 268, p. 7. FOLL AVOIN — Robt. Dickson in Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. xi, p. 292. FOLLE — Wisconsin Fur Trade Accounts, vol. iv, 1820-21, manuscript 172 (Wisconsin
Historical Society manuscript collection). FOLLE AVOINE — Flore Canadienne, Provancher, vol. n, p. 665. FOLLS AVOINE — Morse, Report to Secretary of War, appendix, p. 34. FOLS AVOIN — Coues, Pike, vol. i, p. 76.
HAFERREIS — Dietrich und Konig, Futtermittel, Zweite Aurlage, Berlin, 1891, i, p. 585. INDIAN OATS. INDIAN RICE — Lamson-Scribner, Useful and Ornamental Grasses; U. S. Dept. of
Agric., Div. of Agros., Bull. 3, p. 95. MAD OATS— Kohl, Travels, vol. n, p 46. MALOMIN — J. Long, Voyages and Travels, p. 205. MA-NO-MEN — Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. xm, p. 443. MANO'MIX — Ojibwa Indians on Lac Courte Oreille reservation, Wisconsin, 1899. MAN-OM-IN — Palmer, Food Products of the North American Indians; Rept. Dept. of
Agric., 1870-71, p. 422.
MANOMINAN — Keating, Narrative of an Expedition, vol. 11, p. 459. MA.NORRIN — Lamson-Scribner, Useful and Ornamental Grasses. MARSH RICE (a kind of).
M KXO'MA — Hoffman, Menomini Indians, p. 324. MHXOMEX — Samuel R. Brown, Western Gazetteer, p. 267. ME-XO-MAW — Pokagon, letter, Nov. 16, 1898. MEXOMEXE — Flint, op. cit., p. 84. MKNOMON — J. Long, op. cit., p. 205. MO-NO-MIN— Schoolcraft, op. cit., vol. n, p. 463. MoN-o-MiN — Ibid.
MOXOMOXICK — New York Colonial Documents, vol. ix, p. 161, note 6. MTIIXOOMIX — Ivhv. F. Wilson, Ojebwa Language. Mrx-xo-Mix — Schoolcraft, op. cit, vol. n, p. 463. MCS-CO-SK-MK-NAII — Harmon, Journal, p. 394. OATS — Radisson, Voyages, p. 207. PSE — Keating, Narrative, vol. n, p. 459. I'MII •— Kdw. I'almer, op. cit., p. 422. I'SIN— Schoolcraft, op. cit., vol. i, p. 187.
PSI'XA— Winnebago Indians near Elroy, Wisconsin, winter 1898-99. RICE — Schoolcraft, op. cit., vol. i, p. 187. \ii7. DC CANADA — Flore Canadienne, vol. n, p. 665. I!EKI> — Lamson-Scribner, Useful and Ornamental Grasses, p. 95. SKE-XAH— Henry Merrell, Manuscript Winnebago Dictionary. Si^'-rKKV— Dorsey, Omaha Sociology, Third Annual Kept. P.ur. Ethnol., 1881-82,
p. .SOS.
Siji'Aw RICE— White inhabitants, Hayward, Wisconsin, 1899. STANDING; CORN — Ellis, Recollections, p. 265. TrscAHOKA — Flore Canadienne, vol. n, p. 665.
Trsr • AHIIRA RICE — Lamson-Scribner, Useful and Ornamental ( frasscs, p. 95. U'ASSKKHAFER— Jahresbericht iiber die Fortschritte der Agrikiilturchemie, Fiinfter .Iiihiwuig, 18(12-63, p. 59.
19 KTH, IT -2 30
lll-_'4 WILD HICK (1ATHKKKKS OK UJ'l'KK LAKKS [F.TH. ANN. 19
\V S">:KKI:I.S— Ibid, p. 59.
\V \mi i > \-i-s- Laiii-iin-Scrilnicr. op. cii., |.. !i.~>.
\V \.'I'KK KICK — Ibid. p. '.)"•.
WILD o.vr?.— Cones, (Expedition of /.. M. Cike, vol. i. p. 344. \Vn.n KICK — Ijiinsoii-ScriliiuT, op. cit.. p. !'o.
The letter fr< !<i Professor Matsumura, above referred to, enables me to add a short list of synonyms for the plant and seed from Japan. China, and Formosa, as follows:
CHIMAKI-GUSA (thousand-rolling-grass) — Japan.
KATSI-BO (water-reed) — Japan.
KOMO-GAYA (covering-grass) — Japan.
KOMO-GUSA (matting or covering-grass) — Japan.
MAKMICSA (rolling-grass) — Japan.
MAKIIMO i water-reed) — Japan.
KAr-i'KH-srxG — Formosa.
KAXSC (the name for the young shoot) — China.
HANAOATSUMI (rtower-water-reed-fruit, i. e., the seed or grain) — Japan.
KATMUMI (water-reed-fruit, i. e., the seed or grain) — Japan.
MAKOMO-NO-MI (fruit of the water-reed. i. e., the seed or grain) — Japan.
ETYMOLOGY OF "MANO'MIN"
Of the American synonyms given above, the larger number follow i(the norm iminii 'nun. This is the Algonquian word for wild rice, and it is chiefly through this term that the plant has influenced geo- graphical names in America. The word is a compound of the adjec- tive and adverbial form m,-n<>. meaning " good." "right," "well," and of the noun form miit. meaning " berry." Mi--n<> never changes its form in the language, but is used quite variously, as /,,,-///> . ''good man": IH>-II<> <i/i-i/<ni\ "he is getting well." This term and m«ir-1<-h'i. or i,m,i-tr],'t, meaning "bad," and used exactly as is nn-nn, are the most common adjectives in the Ottawa and Ojibwa languages.1 The form min is used in a great many words which denote berry or fruit, as in ait-zfu&o-ioay-min (beechnut), aiii-xln-nt!» (ap|)lc). x/i<tit'-l><,-iii!ii (gooseberry), //i*-i//i//--/i,//i (maize), and
in ! a (red raspberry)." Among the Algonquian tribes of New Eng- land. kinsmen of the Ottawa and Ojibwa Indians, min or meen is the word for berry or uiaixe. «//'// being the general term for berry/' Thus iiiniin' mill, the term by \vliich wild rice tirst came to be known among the white settler- of the Northwest the French at Green bav. Wisconsin is the Algonquian word for the verv suggestive and common -cii>e term "good berry." or "good fruit." The French named the plant foil, >ir<,'n« (wild oat. mad oat. or fool oat), and tlii- term and its \ arious faulty renditions are frequently applied to
'Si-i- Wilwm. Ojchxvn Ijui»tliiii;<-. \>. L'l: Hliickhir.l, HNlc.ry nf tin- Otlinvit. pp. 11 1. !]•_•. -Kliickliinl. up. cit.. p. I'-"-': sec also \ViK,,n Mini ••'Iliirnitt. Iinliiiii ..i N,.w Knu'Inn.l. ].. lit.
JENKSJ POPULAR DESCRIPTION 1025
the plant in early accounts of the Northwest. Marquette once called it fiinxxe avoine (false oat), and the Latin arena fatua was doubtless applied to the plant because of the term adopted by the French. It is difficult to say what the Siouan norm is, but probably it is ~psin, which is often followed by some slightly accented vowel, as in the word psina.
SCIENTIFIC DESCRIPTION
The genus Zizania comprises two species, and is well characterized by the unisexual spikelets in an androgynous panicle, each having two glumes, and the males having two stamens. The plant ordinarily grows from 5 to 10 feet high, with a thick, spongy stem and an abun- dance of long, broad leaves. The chief mark of distinction between the two species is that the miliacea bears its male and female flowers intermixed on its fruit head, while the aquatica bears its female flowers near the top, where the cylindrical panicle, from 1 to 2 feet long, is quite appressed, and its male flowers on the more widely spread lower branches of the panicle. The glumes or husks of the female or fertile flowers are about an inch long and are armed with an awn or beard usually of about the same length as the husk, but at times of twice its length. The grain, which is inclosed within the glumes, is a slender cylindrical kernel, varying in length from almost half an inch to nearly an inch, and is of dark slate color when ripe. The plant is an annual, and grows in either fresh or brackish waters from a bed of mud alluvium.
POPULAR DESCRIPTION
Wild rice is one of the most beautiful aquatic single-stem plants in America. The grain is shed into the water when it ripens in the autumn, and lies in the soft ooze of alluvial mud at the bottom of a lake or river until spring, when it germinates and grows rapidly to the surface. Text-books have frequently called the plant perennial. The old stalks die down below the surface of the water before the time arrives for the new ones to appear, so the inference has been made that they all come from the same root; but the plant is an annual, growing from new seed each year. It was called a biennial by the Detroit Gazette December 24, 1820.
Karly in June the shoot appears at the surface of the water and at once begins to prepare its fruit head. At about this stage of its growth it has been described as follows:
When seen from a distance, they [the rice beds] look like low green islands on the hikes; on passing through one of these rice beds when the rice is in flower, it has a beautiful appearance with its broad grassy leaves and light waving spikes, garnished with pale yellow green blossoms, delicately shaded with reddish purple, from beneath which fall three elegant straw-colored anthers, which move with every breath of air or slightest motion of the waters.1
i Catherine Parr Trail 1, Backwoods of Canada, p. 287.
1 1 >:><•> WILD KICK (iATHKKKKS OK fl'I'KR LAKKS [ETH.ASN. 1'J
The plant blossoms in .June, ami by September the seeds arc mature. The fruit heads are mostly of a pale green color with a tinge of yel- low, hut at maturity they generally acquire a cast of purple.1 Rice beds have been described as resembling tields of wheat, of eanebrake. and of maize. At maturity the stalks range from L> to 1^ feet in height above the water, and they also vary much in thickness. Their total length depends largely on the depth of the water in which they grow, as well as on the fertility of the soil.
This latter cause atl'ects also the size and strength of the stem. The stalks are most frequently from 5 to 8 feet in^ length, but they are also found as long as 16 or 20 feet. They grow up through water varying from \~2 inches to 10 or 12 feet in depth. Mr L. A. Paddock, of Grass lake. Lake county, Illinois, describes the plant in the most luxuriant growth which it is believed to acquire in America. His description i.s unique also in the fact that, at Grass lake, after the plant grows to the surface of the water, and until it is 2 or 3 feet long, it lies flat upon the surface. Then as each leaf enlarges and gains strength the stalk straightens up (others have said that if once the young shoot gets down onto the water, it can not possibly rise, but dies without fruitage). By the middle of July the stalks are about 8 feet, high. At that time from the center of each stalk a long slender shoot grows to the height of about 4 feet above the topmost leaf. This shoot bears the fruit head. The stalk grows an inch or more in diam- eter, and to the height of 10 or 12 feet above the water. It grows to this, its greatest height, in water 1 foot deep, but it will grow and mature in water 8 feet in depth, in which case it rises about 4 feet above the surface. The roots are so strong and matted that they will support the weight of a man walking upon the mass in shallow water.8
NATURAL ENEMIES
An annual plant clearly seems to grow not for itself, but for its suc- cessors. Anything which destroys the seeds, even though they have readied maturity and are ready to grow, is as much an enemy of the species as though the parent plant had been destroyed. However, inasmuch as the plant may produce, say, a hundred offspring, the destruction of the plant before the maturity of its seeds may be a hun- dredfold more serious than the destruction of a mature seed.
It will later be seen that the Indian, by his use of the wild-rice seed, i> a great enemy of the plant, for it will be shown that the plant, unless it is artificially sown, is gradually being extinguished in such beds as are continually used. Waterfowl in countless numbers feed upon the grain at its maturity. In fact, it is so choice a food for duck, geese, teal, and other waterfowl that it is now quite frequently sown by gun
1 Kllic.ll Con,-, in Kotaliiritl (iitxpttr, HIT ,1894, p. 506. •Paddock. li-ttL-r. January fl), 1899.
.1KNKS]
NATURAL ENEMIES 1027
clubs in mud-bottomed waters in hunting preserves to attract such fowl for shooting. '
Many descriptions are given of clouds of blackbirds, redwing black- birds, and ricebirds which subsist on the grain during and immediately after its milk stage.3 Rails, pigeons, quails, herons, cedar birds, wood- peckers, and many other birds also consume the grain by feeding from the heavy stalks.3
Caterpillars have been known to destroy an entire crop of wild rice in the neighborhood of Rainy river.4 Mr Pither mentions a worm which eats into and destroys the grain in Manitoba, Canada.5 This is probably the "maggot," which is the larva of the water weevil (Li«- xnr/Ki/'lrii* xiinjili-,1-). The " maggot" is a very small white legless grub; it destroys the plant by working in its roots, while a beetle, the wiiter weevil just cited, eats the leaves of the plant.6
A fungus, Entytoiini <-r<txf<iji/i!l nm. Sacc.(<), works in the sheath of the grain,7 while ('hirii-r^x xj>. also works on the plant," and in Japan the t'ungus Uxtiltuju ,!«-n!, nt<i attacks the shoot.9
A fungus, CUn<!cej>x jiiirjn/i'i'ii. occurs quite commonly on the grain in northern Wisconsin, where the Indians speak of it as ''fro/en rice." In its early stage it consists of a profuse growth of mycelium in the tissue and on the surface of the young ovary. The product is a compact, horn-shape, dark body called the sclerotium, which occu- pies the position of the displaced ovary. The sclerotium lies dormant during the winter, and in the spring germinates by forming tiny spores which free themselves, and begin growth in the tissue and in the ovary, as is told above.1"
Storms, frosts, and floods cause great, doubtless the greatest, dam- age to wild rice. "
I See chapter VI for the ronsumption of wild rii-e by ihese triune birds.
•- The most common <>( these blackbirds, nil of winch arc fond of wild rice, are the purple grackle i fhii*,-<ilii.< ijiit^i'iifn i, the boat-taileil truckle i <j. tin/jut-], and Hie rusty grackle (Soolecoptuigua ca/rottnua i. The redwing or swani|. blackbird i Aijilniiif ji/in'iiii-i n«> forms large migratory flocks in the autumn in nil of the Northern slate-. ;ind becomes very destructive to the grain. The ricebird, rcedbird, or bobolink i M)//'7/<y//</.r or//;/ror"M is tlic natural bird enemy of wild rice, and is found in countless numbers in all— both brackish anil fresh water— wild-rice marshes during the autumn.
•' I'ither. letter, December fi. ISO*: McKemiey. Memoir, vol. it, p. 104; Hind, Narrative, vol. I, p. 118. The soj-a rail i l'nr-:n,,n r/n'ij/n" >, the yellmv rail i />. uni tboracensis), and the black rail (P.jamaicensis) feed ii]n.n wild rice. The sora rail is especially common in fresh-water wild-rice marshes. For ref- erences to great i lumbers of waterfowl in Minnesota, see Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. I, pp. 18G-187, vol. iv. pp. 19:i-194. For the waterfowl on Fox river, see Brown, Western Gazetteer, pp. 252,201: also Sehooleraft, Summary Narrative, p. 183, and Fcatherstonhaugh, Canoe Voyage, vol. I, p. 180.
: Sec chapter vi (page 1100).
•'• Pither. oji. cit.
|; I.. (I. Howard, Insects Affecting the Rice Plant, in Kepi, of the Commissioner of Agric. for 1881 and 188-2, Kept, of the Entomologist, pp. 127, 138.
7 Wm. Trelease, Preliminary List of Wisconsin Parasitic Fungi, in Wis. Aead. Sci., Lit., and Arts, vol. vi, number 'J.'iS; Madison. 1885, p. 139.
"Ibid., number 6fi, p. 115.
' Matsumura, letter, December 1(1. isus.with reference to Henning's Hedwigia, Band xxxiv, 1895, p.10.
'"Lucius E. Sayre, A Manual of Organic Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy, etc.; Philadelphia, 18'.r>. p. 439.
II See chapter vi. Very little scientific attention has been given to Ziza/i/<i n<{iinfirn: consequently the present treatment of its enemies is scanty. Answers to letters of inquiry lead to the conclusion that more careful attention will be given it in the near future.
CHAITKK II
HABITAT
INTRODUCTION'
/.;-<n,;<i aytwrtfoa grows in North America from about latitude r.n on the north to the Gulf of Mexico on the south, and from the Atlantic ocean to the Kocky mountains. In Manitoba it extends farther north- ward than r>o in the Winnipeg drainage, and in Ontario toward Hudson
> bay. Il grows abundantly in the brackish, almost stagnant, waters of the Atlantic and ( iulf states, and along the sloughs of Mississippi river from its headwaters as far south as the stole of Mississippi; indeed it doubtless occurs along the entire course of this river. It fringes
"ithe north shore of Lake Ontario, the northwest, west, and southwest shores of Lake Krie. Georgian bay of Lake Huron, the shore of Lake
) Huron south of Georgian bay, St. Clair lake, and Green bay of Lake Michigan. Resides growing in these great waterways, it flourishes in countless small lakes, ponds, and streams in the eastern half of the I'nited States. It is esj>ecially abundant in the region which this memoir designates the "wild-rice district."* In'fact, the plant is quite common in the United States east of the Rocky mountains, and in ( 'anada as far north as latitude 52 . in lakes, ponds, and slow-flowing streams which have an alluvial bed. Nowhere will it grow in water having a sand or clay bed, or in swiftly flowing streams.
HABITAT BY STATES
In this section is presented the wild-rice habitat in the various state.- so far as data could be collected (see plate LXVI).
Ai. \HAMA. Common in the middle section along streams (letter of P. H. Moll, Auburn. Alabama. May 1, 18!M>).
1 In tin- preimration of this chapter text-books on botany have been of little or no assistance. They have vi-ry generally Kiven the habitat of / ta in such indefinite language as the follow-
inir: "Common from N"\a Scotia to Florida and west to Minnesota." For the material of tliis chap- ter corres|ioiideiiee ]m» been conducted with college and university teachers of botany and with r* of experiment stations in most of the Commonwealths Of the United States and Canada.
Tlie effort ha- I ii to gather data from each section so that a fairly representative hahitat may he
d. -<Til>cd. Ivrhaps th,- most strikiui: result of the investigation is that which shows how limited
tlie knowleditc of s eof our economic plants U. and that, too, in states in which they are common.
i hat more attention will he j-ivcti to a -ystematic study of our economic plants. I'rof. .1. W.IIai>htMTKer presents the following reasons for the study of ethno-botany, a term which well minht he ctlm t.otany: It aids in cluoidatint; the culture-position of the tribes which
iie plant; it helps in d-eidini; the ancient tn.l. routes; mid it siin^'sts new lines. if manufac- ture t,Mlay.— HarshlM-nrer, The l'ur|Kis.'s of Kthn. .-botany, liotanical (Ja/ettc. March. ls%. p. lie,
hapter VI. Ibis uilii-ri. .• district is Wisconsin ic.xccpt its southwestern part) and a part of i Minnesota.
1028
.IE.NKS] HABITAT BY STATKS 1029
ARIZONA. Not known (letter of J. W. Tourney, Tucson, Arizona, n> 'comber 7, 1898).
ARKANSAS. Not in an extensive collection made by Prof. F. L. Harvey (letter of Jerome McNeill, Fayetteville, Arkansas, December 21, 1898). Charles Pickering says (History of Plants, Boston, 1879, p. 77-2) that Nuttall observed it along the Arkansas river. It also occurs along the Mississippi.
CALIFORNIA. Not known (letter of J. Burt Davy, Berkeley, Califor- nia, December 6, 1898).
COLORADO. Not known ; it was twice introduced but failed to grow (letter of C. S. Crandall, Fort Collins. Colorado, December 12, 1898). However, the Indians gathered it near Denver in 1872.
CONNECTICUT. Common near New Haven (letter of Alex. W. Evans, New Haven, Connecticut, January 3, 1899). It grows also in the brackish coastal marshes which are submerged most of the time, and also along Connecticut river, as at Essex.
DELAWARE. Catalogued by Tatnall as being "very common'' in "ditches and muddy banks of streams" in Newcastle county (letter of W. H. Bishop, Newark, Delaware, December 12, 1898). Featherston- haugh (A Canoe Voyage up the Minnay Sotor, London, 1847, vol. i, p. 180) says it is very common near Newport. Lamson-Scribner (Useful and Ornamental Grasses, p. 95) asserts that it is abundant in Delaware river below Philadelphia, where it is always called "the reeds."
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. Abundant along the Potomac, covering areas of many acres (letter of F. Lamson-Scribner, Washington, April 25, 1899).
FLORIDA. Very abundant. It occurs in deep ponds in Columbia and Suwannee counties. "1 think I have also seen it in Orange, Lake, and Sumter counties, together with several others " (letter of P. H. Rolfs, biologist and horticulturist, Florida Agricultural College and Experiment Station, Lake City, Florida, December 10, 1898). Picker- ing (op. cit., p. 771) says that Pursh received a specimen of the plant from Florida. MacCauley (Seminole Indians of Florida, in Fifth Annual Report Bureau of Ethnology, p. 504) says that the Seminole Indians gather in the swamps all the rice they need.
GEORGIA. Grows in Clark county and elsewhere in small quanti- ties (letter of John P. Campbell, Athens, Georgia, April 13, 1899).
IDAHO. Not known, and probably not found west of the Rocky mountains (letter of L. F. Henderson, Moscow, Idaho, December 11, 1 M»8).
ILLINOIS. Quite common in Carroll county, Bluff lake in Union county, and in ponds formed by Illinois river in Peoria and Fulton counties (letter of G. P. Clinton, Urbana, Illinois, May 3, 1899). It is also very abundant (one thousand acres) in Grass lake, Lake county (letter of L. A. Paddock, Grass lake, Lake county, Illinois, January
\VII.D KICK liATHKKKKS OF CITKII I.AKKS [ETH. ANN. l:i
•jo. 1 v.c.i). It also grow- plentifully in sloughs of the Mississippi and in small streams in Jo Daviess county.
INDIANA. Found in Gibson. Monroe, and La Porte counties.
I\DI\N TKUIUTOIIY. Not known (letter of A. Grant Evans. Mus- cogee. Indian Territory. April ~2:>. iv.c.i).
IOWA. Coiiiinon. especially in the northern and central parts. It ha- been collected in Fnuiiet. Scott, Delaware, Clinton. Linn, liuin- boldt. Johnson. Louisa, Hancock. Wright, Story, and Fayettc coun- ties (letter of B. Shiiuek, Iowa City. Iowa. December, 1898).
KANSAS. Not known (letter of A. S. Hitchcock, Manhattan, Kan-as. April L'4, iS't'.t).
KENTUCKY. Grows in lakes in the "barrens" in the western part of the state (letter of C. W. Mathews, Lexington, Kentucky.
Derelllbel- I.',. IS'.IS).
LOUISIANA. •'Occurs plentifully in all the lower counties" (let- ter of George K. Beyer. New Orleans, Louisiana, December lit. Is'.iS; also letter of A. B. Langlois. St Martinville, Louisiana, November -21. L898).
MAIXK. Abundant in Aroostook county in the Mattawamkeag river system: very abundant in the Penobscot river system above tidewater. It i- also abundant in Kennebec county on Messalonskee river and other tributaries of the Kennebec. and it is found in Franklin county along Sandy river. "'Doubtless the plant is common in other waters in central Maine" (letter of M. L. Fernald, Gray Herbarium. Cambridge, Massachusetts).
Mvnvi.AM). Abundant in Anne Arundel county, and probably in other counties bordering on Chesapeake bay (letter of N. W. Bar- ton. Baltimore. Maryland, about December 10, 1898).
MASSACHUSETTS. Uather common in many streams and ponds in eastern Ma>-achu-etN. in at least Kssex, Middlesex, and Norfolk coun- ties. It is found also in Connecticut river at Northampton, in Hamp- shire county (letter of M. L. Fernald. Gray Herbarium, Cam- bridge. Ma--achu-ett>. December 1^. 1898).
I MICHIGAN. Found throughout the state in mud-bottomed lakes and sluggish streams: also found commonly in Grand river valley (let- ter of C. F. Wheeler. Michigan Agricultural College post-office, Mich- igan). It is found also in Huron river. Washtenaw county (letter of F. C. Newcombe. Ann Arbor. Michigan, December 9, 1898). The plant is also very abundant in St Joseph river in southwestern Michi- gan. and is found also in various streams and small alluvial lakes in Kalama/.oo and Barry counties.
MIVNKSUTA. See the "Wild-rice District." in the present chapter, L088 !'««;.
. Common in the extreme southern part of the state (letter of S. M. Tracy. Agricultural College. Mississippi, January (>, 1899). It is found also along Mississippi river.
OKXKSJ HABITAT BY STATES 1031
MISSOURI. No data through correspondence.
MONTANA. Not known (letter of J. \V. Hlankinship, Bozeman, Montana, December 12, 1898).
NEBRASKA. Grows throughout the state (letter of Charles E. Hessey, Lincoln, Nebraska, December !», 1898). It also occurs in swamps in the sand hills near Whitman, Grant county (Dept. of Agric., Div. of Botany, U. S. Nat. Herbarium, vol. in, p. 187).
NEVADA. Not known (letter of Marcus E. Jones, Salt Lake City, Utah, December 23, 1898).
NEW HAMPSHIRE. Found in Androscoggin river (letter of Henry C. Jessup, Hanover, New Hamphire, December 13. 1898).
NEW JERSEY. "Common in most districts." in lakes and ponds and tidal waters, especially in Delaware river (letter of G. Macloskie, Princeton, New Jersey, December 15, 1898). A fossil grass with a broad leaf was discovered in the Yellow Gravel at Bridgeton, which Dr N. L. Britton, of New York City, says perhaps is Z!zn»-!ti (Trans- actions N. Y. Academy of Sciences. November 24. 1JSS4. p. 31; also Proceedings Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci.. vol. xxxi, 1882, p. 359).
N" KW MEXICO. Not known (letter of E. O. Wooton, MesillaPark, New Mexico, December 22, 1898).
NEW YORK. It was collected in large quantities by the Seneca and other Indians in 1870.
NORTH CAROLINA. Common in low and submerged districts (let- ter of H. V. Wilson, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, February 15, 1899). Notes on Grasses and Forage Plants of the Southern States (U. S. Dept. of Agric., Div. of Agros., Bull. 1, 1895, p. 34) says it grows near Wilmington, New Hanover county; see also Gerald McCarty in Botanical Gazette, vol. x. 1885, p. 385.
NORTH DAKOTA. Grows in Ramsey and Benson counties in Svveet- water lake and in Twin lake, where it is very abundant, and also in Devils lake (letter of Melvin A. Brannon, Grand Forks. North Dakota. December 10, 1898). Cones (New Light on the Greater Northwest, vol. i, p. 138) says that in 1800 wild rice was plentiful in a marais (now Morse's slough) at Washville, Walsh county. It is also quite plentiful in the Dakotas, east of the Mississippi. It is often so abundant in Sioux river as to cover the entire bed for long dis- tances (Grasses and Forage Plants of the Dakotas, U. S. Dept. of Agric., Div. of Agros., Bull. 6, p. 17).
OHIO. Grows in the state as far south as 40 miles below Columbus, and is also reported from Cincinnati in the catalog of Joseph F. -lames (letter of W. E. Kellerman, Columbus, Ohio, May 18, 1899). It grows also in the shallow waters of Lake Erie.
OKKGON. Not known (letter of E. R. Lake, Corvallis, Oregon, December 30, 1898).
PENNSYLVANIA. Abundant along Delaware river and its tribu- taries, but probably does not extend far inland (letter of John R.
lll."-_> \V1I.I) KICK O. \TIIKKEHS (IF UPPER LAKES [ETII.AN.N.!'.'
Martarlanc. Philadelphia. December li'. IM'M. It is reported in Brandy wine river, in Chester county, l.y Flora (Vstrica. }). !>:-'.. edited in Westoheflter, Pennsylvania. 1*:-17. Thomas ('. Porter (A List of thedrasse-of Pennsylvania, Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. \nl. \\. 1M»:;. p. I'.tT) .-ays that it grows in Lancaster county al>ove
Shocks Mill.
RIKIDK ISLAND. Occurs in Pi-ovidence county (letter of J. Frank- lin Collm-. Pro \idenee. Rhode Island. May 4, 1899).
SOITII CAKOI.INA. No data through correspondence.
Sorrii DAKOTA. Abundant in streams tributary to Sioux. -lames, and Little Minnesota rivers, and throughout eastern South Dakota (letter of D. W. Saunders. Brooking. South Dakota. .January 4, l.vi'.t; gee also (irasses and Forage Plants of the Dakotas, U. S. Dept. of Agric.. Div. of Agros., Bull. 6, p. 17). It is also reported from Huron. Tacoina. Brookings. and Sioux Falls counties.
TKXNKSSKK. Not known (letters of Samuel McBain, Knoxville, Tennessee. December '.'. is:**. and November 27, 1899).
TKXAS. "(irows in Texas, presumably in south and east Texas, abundantly" (letter of William M. Bray, Austin, Texas, December 13, is1.'*).' Coulter (Dept. of Agric., Div. of Bot, U. S. Nat. Her- barinin. vol. i, p. 55) says that it is found in the region of the Kio (irande "between Brazos Santiago, and El Paso county."
UTAH. Not known (letter of O. Howard, Salt Lake City, Utah, December 13, 1898).
YKKMOXT. Grows in abundance in Lake Champlain valley in at least Franklin. Chittenden. Addison. Rutland, and Grand Isle counties (letter of L. R. Jones, Burlington. Vermont, December 27, 1898).
VIRGINIA. Not known in the Allegheny or Piedmont regions, but is found in the Potomac flats (letter of A. H. Tuttle, Charlottesville, Virginia. -January 17. 1*1)9).
\\ vsiiiNdKiN. No data through correspondence.
WK.ST VIKCIMA. Not known (letter of W. E. Rumsey, Morgan- town. West Virginia. December 17, 1898).
\Visi ONSIN. See the •• Wild-rice District," in the present chapter.
\ViuMiN<;. Not known (letter of Aven Nelson, Laramie, Wyo- ming. December !:>. Is'.tS).
During the first quarter of the nineteenth century wild rice grew quite extensively in that expanse of the. United States lying between tin- Mississippi river and the Rocky mountains.1
' Mr Julin Iniiiii I! i intern ii> M raptire from childhood to young manhood among the Osage Indians, anil ilurinc the lir-l <|imrt. r ..I th.- ninrtiTnth ci'iitury niftmvcl OVIT "the Missouri and Arkansas country." wliicli ln> .li>c r - " rMiiindfi'. on tin- i-ust l.y till' state of Missouri and Mississippi
river; north tiy the- liriti-h iloniininii.--. west by the R<ieky mountains; and south by the Arkansas river mid territories of 'he Mexii-iin c-iupiri-" i Hunter. Memoirs <>f a Captivity, pp. 137, 13S). Ho elassi- hinds of tliis extensive territory under five heads, as follows: (1) Alluvial or river bottom, r.!) fertile prairies. 1:1. liill-, I iiMru^es or <.WHinps, i'>) Imrrens or sterile prairies. He says of the mnnuM» ..r s« aini.s. " In K,-ii.-ral they afford the wild rice, from which, after the liutTali.es and other gnuint: animals iiave tramped over it. Hit- Indians collect their supplies" libid.. p. M'_>i.
CO
HJ
m
I
ui o
<r
Q
JENKS] HABITAT IN WILD-RICE DISTRICT 1033
Thus it will be .seen that Zizania aquatica occurs in all the common- wealths of the United States, so far as ascertained by correspondence, except in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Indian Territory, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, West Vir- ginia, and Wyoming. Most of these states lie in or west of the Rocky mountains. It is' believed that the plant grows in both West Virginia and Tennessee, but it has not yet been reported.
There are three states from which no data have been collected, viz, Missouri, South Carolina, and Washington. It is believed that the plant grows in the former two.
HABITAT IN THE WILD-RICK DISTRICT
Wherever the last glacier left little mud-bottomed, water-filled hol- lows, there wild rice has established itself, if other conditions are favorable. Such ponds and lakes are characteristic of the alluvial apron spread out over Wisconsin and Minnesota. In 1817 the interior of Wisconsin is spoken of as watered with innumerable small lakes and ponds which generally abound with folle avoine [wild rice], water- fowl, and fish, each in such prodigious quantities that the Indians are in a manner exempt from the contingence of famine.1
Within the wild-rice district sluggish streams and quiet bends in the rivers and creeks also produce wild rice, provided the bed is mud alluvium. The grain has followed the stream toward its mouth, the waterfowl has sown it in its flight, and the Indian has carried it to his favorite lakes and streams, until to-day it is safe to say that the grain is found wherever in these two states there is suitable soil (see plate LXVII a).
Before the middle of the seventeenth century wild rice was reported as the staple food of the Menomini Indians, and as being very plentiful on what is nowJVtenomini river, the boundary between Wisconsin and the upper peninsula of Michigan. Indian tradition first speaks of the grain as being found in this stream, and from here as a starting place the present memoir will follow the plant along the various waterways of the wild-rice district. Green bay, from above the mouth of Menomini river southward to the bay-head, has been fringed with the plant from earliest historic times, and to-day there are thousands of acres of wild rice in the shallows of its waters. Most of the streams which discharge into it — allot' those which are suitable — bear the grain abundantly. Fox river, from Lake Winncbago to its source, has been reported as filled with wild rice from the time of Marquette, who spoke of it in 1673 as follows: "The way is so cut up by marshes and little lakes that it is easy to go astray, especially as the river is so covered with wild oats that one can hardly discover the channel.'" Carver, in
'Samuel K. Brown. Western Gazetteer, p. 252.
'-Quoted by Thwnites in Historic- Waterways, Chicago, 1888, pp. 156,167.
10,", I WILD KICK OATHKRKK3 OF UPPKB LAKES [ETii.ANN.19
17f,7. wrote, -in fome places it is with difficulty that canoe- can pafs, through the ohitructions they meet with from the rice ftalks, which arc very large and thick."1 Featherstonhaugb wrote, in 1*47, that near Fort Winnohago then- were several tliousand acres of wild rice. He esi imated the fields as at least 5 miles long and 2 miles wide.8 He .-aid that on Fox river they were obliged to stop paddling and "all took to warping the canoe through l>y liauling upon the tall stalks. In 18JSS a writer stated that north of the portage of the Fox and Wis- consin rivers, "as far as the eye can reach, there is a stretch of wild-rice swamp."1
Fox river illustrates well the influence of the current upon the exist- ence of wild rice. From the portage between the Fox and Wisconsin rivers to Lake Winnebago, Fox river is 104 miles long, with a total fall of only -tO feet, and. as has been seen, it is filled with the plant. On the other hand, from lake Winnebago to Green bay, where the stream is only 37i miles long, with a fall of 170 feet, the plant does not flourish.
Wild rice is found along Wisconsin river even below the portage just referred to,5 while the headwaters of the Wisconsin are often dense wild-rice beds. Wolf river and its tributaries also grow the plant.
The upper waters of the Red Cedar, Chippewa, and St Croix rivers are filled with the growth, and it is from this supply that the Ojibwa Indians of Lac Courte Oreille reservation gather their annual crop6 (see plate LXVII 1>). In speaking of the Menomini, Wolf, Fox, Wiscon- sin, lied Cedar, Chippewa, and St Croix rivers and systems, it must be remembered that the various lakes, ponds, and streams in all this .-ect ion of country are considered.
Although Dr .ledidia'u Morse7 reported in 1822 that wild rice did not grow within l.">n miles <>i' Lake Superior on the south, yet it is now annually gathered in many of the streams flowing into Lake Superior from this region, and in ISltO J. G. Kohl stated that "the plant is very prevalent in the southern part of the lake [Lake Superior
The headwater- of Mi.-sissippi river in Minnesota are in the heart of the Minnesota rice fields.1' The regions about Mille Lacs. Leech lake. Sandy lake, (iull lake, and Lake Winnibigoshish. all draining into the Mississippi, are abundantly supplied with wild rice.10 Maps
' Carver. Travel- -,.p. Ml!. Hr.m n. Western im/cttcrr. p.-Jiil. Cones, I'ike, vol. I, p. 302.
ii,T-tonhailKh. Canoe Voyaite, vol. i, p. 1HI.
I'.KI.
«Thw.iite-.<i|,.rii ..p. ]|.. MOtaO Kil wiiri I Tun HIT in Detroit c,u/etie. January i:,,1819. 1 Uwjiter. Indian-, p. is],
tammer Kamhle-.pp. i:,i, i.,-j; ,,l-o sHmoicmft, Thirty Yeiirs with tlie Indian Tribes, pp. OOlcraft, -unimarv Narrative, nppen.lix. p. TvIS; Carver, Travels, p. ft:
Ue|,,irtof the CommlMtoner oi Indian .Mlnii>. \*M. |, :,i
' Mor-e. Ke|ic,rt,il|,pe!lili\.p. :>l. •Ki,lil,Klt<-lii-(iiiliii.pp. 117 118.
•lemft, In.lian Tril«-s.vi,l.iv,pi.. liB-l!M; nls., Sehmleraft, Summary Narrative, pp. 134, 235,
» ll.-nnepin. S.,IIM 'II,. |,.Y,,nverle.p. :>!:!« ifol.ll'l See al-,, Indian AtTairs Report. 1850, pp.56,61; .-eh, -il( ruft, Indian Tril,es, vol. i, pp. I
.IKNKS] HABITAT IN WILD-RICE DISTRICT
of fifty years ago present a "Great Rice M[arsh]" as extending along Minnesota river (then generally represented as the St Peters) from its juncture with the Mississippi at St Paul up as far as Beaver falls in Renville county, Minnesota;1 and Carver said of this country in 17»>7, "Wild rice grows here in great abundance."
Lakes and streams draining into Red river of the North, between
V Minnesota and Dakota, are also Minnesota wild-rice fields.2 One of these streams is Wild Rice river, which has its source in two lakes bearing the name Rice, which also lie in Minnesota. Another is
, Pse river, whose source is in the Dakotas. Farther north, the lakes and streams emptying into Lake of the Woods. Rainy lake, and the Winnipeg system in general, are mainly wild rice producing waters.1 Mackenzie said vr
•j Yaft quantities of wild rice are feen throughout the country [from Lake Superior / to 1 like Winnipeg], which the natives collect in the month of Auguft for their winter i f tores.4
Seymour wrote of Lake of the Woods, in 1850:
The indentations of its rocky, moss-covered shores are full of the wild rice, which is annually collected in large quantities by the Indians.3
Farther south the St Louis river system tells the same tale — the streams all bear abundant stores of wild rice.6 — In 1883-the plant was reported from Minnesota as being "common, or frequent, in favorable situations throughout the State; sometimes attaining, in Brown county, a height of 13 feet, with leaves -i feet long."7 Chapter vn of the present memoir still further aims to show the extent of wild rice, where Indian production was carried on, as exhibited by its influence on geographic names.
Some idea of the prevalence of wild rice in the lakes of this district may be obtained from the following characteristic quotations:
The Indians around Sandy lake [Aitkin county, Minnesota], in the month of September, repair to Rice lake, to gather their rice. In no other place does it grow in as large quantities as there. This lake is about 5 miles long and 3 broad. It might, perhaps, be called a Marrais, for the water is not over 5 feet dee]), and its surface is almost entirely covered with rice. It is only in morasses, or muddy bottoms that this grain is found.8
Warren writes of Mille Lacs in 1852, that it is a circular lake about •20 miles across and abundantly stocked with fish. Connected with it
1 Map accompanying Carver's Travels. So- jilso Srhoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. n, p. 97.
- Lord Selkirk's Settlement in North America, p. 120. See also Western .lonrnii], May. .tune. July, An<_'ust. vol. ii. number r>. 1S19; Keating, Narrative, vol lt,p.37.
'• Harmon, Journal, pp. 44, 4o, 1 12. See also McMillan, Observations on the Distribution of Hunts alongshore at Lake of the Woods, pp. 949-1023, in Minn. Bot. Studies, Bull. «. parts 1(1 and 11, p. H'.H- Hind. Narrative, pp. SKI. 97, 115, 116, 118.
' Maekcnxic, VOVHRCS, pp. (>1,(!2.
•' Si-ymour, sketehes of Minnesota, p. 233.
'•S.-hooleraft. Summary Narrative, p. 112; also Indian Affairs Report. 1(191, vol. I, p. 471.
7 I'phjun. Catalogue ot the Flora of Minnesota, p. l.v.t.
8 Edward Tanner, Detroit Gazette. December 8, 1820.
WILD KH-K (JATHKKKKS OK I' I'l'KK LAKKS [BIH.AW.M
i- a string of marshy or muddy-bottomed lakes in which the water is
lint a few feet deep, and wherein the wild rice grows luxuriantly.
•• I', ,,M.,.,jiio- ihoe and other advantages." he says, "there is not a spot
in the northwest which an Indian would sooner choose as a dwelling
place than Millc Lacs."1
.letler-on Davis wrote, in lssr>. that in ISi'lt in the country about j"Tay-cho-pe-rah." "The four lakes country." i. e.. Madison and its [vicinity, in Wisconsin, "the Indians subsisted largely on Indian corn land wild rice."" In IMfi the grain was gathered in Hock river,
"Wisconsin, and chapter vn will show that the plant existed throughout
the southeastern part of the State.
A general view of wild rice in Wisconsin and Minnesota was given
by I'pham in !**:'>. who quotes as follows:
Wild rice . . . acquires in the Northwest an economical importance second to no other spontaneous production. It is the only instance in this region of a native jrr.iin. occurring in sutlicient i|iiantity to supply the wants of ordinary consumption. It is particularly abundant on the lake-like expansions of rivers, toward their sources, which nivr such a marked feature to the distrihution of these northern streams, and is so grandly illustrated in their main type, the .Mississippi. It seems to select, by preference, the lower terminations of these expansions, which generally debouch l»v a narrownl outlet and considerable fall, constituting rapids ... It in rarely met with on inland lakes which have no outlet.8
I This section has shown that most of Wisconsin and the northern half of Minnesota bore wild rice so abundantly that the Indian popu- lation depended very largely upon it for food. This " wild-rice dis- trict." as con>idered in chapter vi. includes Wisconsin, excepting the southwestern part, and that part of Minnesota lying east of Missis- sippi river. This boundary is fixed almost arbitrarily, the only rea- sons being that more accurate statistics of Indian population, and a more precise knowledge of Indian food conditions, were here obtainable than for the territory west of the Mississippi, which consequently i.s left out of consideration, though it has abundant wild-rice fields.
This view of the habitat within the wild-rice district shows that no other section of the North American continent was so characteris- tically an Indian paradise, so far as a spontaneous vegetal food is con- cerned, as was this territory in Wisconsin and Minnesota.
KoiiKKJX HABITAT
Immediately north of the states of Wisconsin and Minnesota, in Canada, the entire system of waterways, extending from Grand Port- age of Lake Superior through the Winnipeg system, produces wild rice abundantly. Still farther north and east there are lakes in which John Long reported the grain one hundred and fifty scars
1 Wurn-ii. lli-t»rv <>! tli" i ijilnm. ]..
• HlllliT. 'l:l> rim |»-r«ll. ill \ViM-ull-in Histiirirul Colli-rljnns. Vol. \ (ISKi-lWil, p. 75. rplinin. OotaiOCU* "i : Mililifsiitu. ].. l.i'i.
JKNKS]
FOREIGN HABITAT 1037
ago. He said that Lake Monontoye "abounds with excellent tisli and wild fowl: and oats, rice, and cranberries grow spontaneously in the swamps."1 Of lied lake (Misqui Sakiegan) Long said, "Fish is caught here in great abundance, and wild rice grows in very great plenty in the swamps." In speaking of Weed lake (Lake Seha- beechevan) he further says, "The swamps arc full of wild rice and cranberries."1 In Ontario wild rice grows in immense beds, along the shore of Lake Ontario, being very abundant in Quinto bay. It grows also along Lake Erie, and along the shore of Lake Huron, especially on the shore of Georgian bay.1 It is plentiful also in that triangular section of Ontario roughly bounded by lakes Huron, Erie, and Ontario, and Ottawa river. Special reference has been made to it in the region of Lake Simcoe and Rice lake~Between Quinto bay and Georgian bay.5
Wild rice is reported as growing in New Brunswick and New t'ouncU land/' The seed has also been planted in Kngland. where Sir Joseph Banks introduced it from Canada, in 1790. In 1819 it was still grow- ing at his villa, Spring Grove.7 It was also planted at Lincolnshire, with the intention of popularizing it as a food for the poor, but it failed.8 The plant is said to be found in Jamaica, and it is further reported from the eastern part of Siberia9 and from eastern Russia, where it is called 7.iz<n>i<i I<ifif<>li</.1" These last two references prob- ably refer to the same country. In Japan the plant is very common, extending from the island of Yezo, in the north, to Shikoku and Kiushiu, in the south, its total habitat thus reaching from 31° to 41° north latitude. It also thrives in eastern China and on the island of Formosa.11 So far as is known the plant is nowhere reported as native in Europe, Africa, Australia, or South America.
I Long, Voyages, p. 76. -I bid., p. 81.
3 Ibid., p. 108.
* Kohl, Travels, vol. n, p. 46, et seq. See also Canniff, History of the Settlement of Upper Canada, pp. 587-588; Newberry, Food and Fiber Plants of the North American Indians, Popular Science Monthly, vol. xxxn, p. 40.
5 Kohl, op. cit., vol. n, p. 46, et seq. See also Flint, History and Geography, vol. n, p. 134'; Copway, Life of Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh, p. 65.
"Mar: Kay, Letter, Halifax, May 1, 1899.
7 Cyclopedia fir Universal Dictionary of Arts, Science, and Literature, vol. xxxix.
"Smith, Dictionary of Economic Plants, p. 83.
'•' Vasi-y, The Agricultural grasses of the United States, Dept. of Agriculture, Hot. Div., Spec. Bull. 1889, p. 47.
'"Benllmm, Notes on (ininiinea1, pp. 14-134, in Jour. Linn. Soc., vol. xix, Botany, 1HS2, p. 54.
II Letter of J. Matsumura, Tokyo, Japan, December 16, 1898.
19 ETH, PT 2 31
CHAITKK III
INDIANS'
TIIK OJIBWA
Tn the region «>f the upper lakes the wild rice producing Indians are of two oreat linguistic stocks, the Algon<iuian and the Siouan. Of the Algon<|tiian stock the Ojibwa. Meuoinini, Sauk, Fox, Ottinva. I'otawatoiui. Maskotin. and Kickapoo tribes will be considered, while of the Siouan stork, attention will be devoted to the Dakota. AVinne- bao-o. and Assiniboin tribes. A small number of refugee Huron and IVtim Indians of the lro([iioian stock were within this territory at one time.
Whi'ii one considers their fierceness, numbers, and extensive habitat, the Ojibwa (usually called Chippewa) and the Dakota (generally desig- nated Sioux) are the most important of all of the Indians within the wild-rice area. These two tribes have been enemies and friends suc- cessively from historic times until 18(52, when the Dakota ^\ere removed from Minnesota.
Kven previous to the records of written history, native tradition paints a picture of almost constant struggle between the Ojibwa and Dakota Indians for the conquest and retention of the territory includ- ing the rich wild-rice tields. Schoolcraft wrote in 1X31:
A country more valuable t" a imputation having the habits of our northwestern Indian.- mnld hardly l>c conceived of; and it is therefore cause of less surprise that it- |, .,--.--i, in should have been so long an object of contention between the Chi]>]>e- \\:i- and Sioux.'-'
The same' author further spoke of this region as follows:
It ha" 1 itcd, from the lirst settlement of Canada, as abounding in the small
furred animals, whose skins are valuable in commerce. Its sources of supply to the native tril.es have hern important. It has, at the same time, had another singular advantage t.. them from the abundance of the grain called monomin, or rice, by the Chippewa Indians, and I'xin by the Sioux. :
Mr \V. \V. Warren ])resented many facts pertaining to the subjcc't in his valuable work. History of the Ojibways. Based upon Tradition and ( )ral Statement^.
1 Miniv fac-t.-i cinii-iTiiiiiK tin- pr.Kliictiuti HIII! i'ciiiniini|iti<iii uf wild ricf by tin- Indians in tli
.lint !»• rc.n-Mi-rc d IMNT in i-luiptrr vi, wliii'ti tn-iits i,f the Kc'iicml social nin] Intcrpri'tiitiini*. Thi- prr-c-nl rhapl.-r .-ci>li- cuily to Icx'atc tin- wild rice produciiin Indians, thfir niicniti"n* nlnl )..>[. illation
: it, Summary Narrath c. p. .'H .'nilcnift. Indian Trilics, vol. I. p. Is7.
LOB8
JKNKS] THE OJIBWA 1039
Indian traditions, such as are recited in the so-called (Irand Medi- cine Society of the Ojibwa, contain much of Indian tribal history. The student will be impressed with the accuracy of Ojibwa traditions, as presented by Mr Warren, when dates are mentioned which authentic written history can confirm.1 That authority states that, according to their traditions, the Ojibwa dwelt on the Atlantic coast north of St Lawrence river about five hundred years ago. At that time they started westward, stopping for a considerable period on the St Law- rence near the present Montreal, again on Lake Huron, then at Sault Ste Marie, and finally at La Pointe. Wisconsin, and possibly also at Fond du Lac, Lake Superior, as one of their traditions includes this latter as a stopping place.
It is not known what name the Ojibwa bore before they reached Michilimackinac. where, from natural causes, they split into three great sections. One section remained near the point of separation — these are the Ottawa. "Ot-tab-wav," or "Traders." . The second, the Pota- watomi, "Pottii-wat-i|in-ees.'' or "Those-who-make-or-keep-a-fire,'' moved up Lake Michigan and for a time kept alive the sacred national fire. The third division, the Oiibwa, or "To-roast-till-puckered-up.'" stopped at Sault Ste Marie for a long period after the separation. They made war against the Iroquois in the east, whom they called "Naud-o- waig," and against the Sioux [Dakota] in the west, whom they called "Naud-o-wa-se-wug." Naud-o-waig literally means "Like-unto-the adders." and is thus an Ojibwa tribute to the deadly warlike spirit of both these tribes.
During a considerable part of the westward migration of the tribal ancestors of the Ottawa, Potawatomi. and Ojibwa Indians, it is doubt- less true that they were driven in that direction by the fierce Iroquois. But since the division of the parent tribe, the Ojibwa, in their continued westward migration, have been mainly fierce aggressors. Some of them remained at Sault Ste Marie and in time became a village. These were the first Ojibwa with whom the French came in contact, and because of the situation of this village the French called all of the Ojibwa Indians " Saulteaux." The remainder of the tribe split again, however, and continued westward. One branch, the Saulteaux, passed north of Lake Superior even to Rainy lake, and formed a lasting peace with the
1 Mr Warren says that the Ojibwa Indians lirst became acquainted with the white man about the >ear 1012 (op. eit., p. 90). Dr Neill has shown from printed records that Stephen Brule, one of the ri'rkless and enterprising voyageurs under < 'bam plain, a ppears to have been the tirst white man who brought to Quebec, about Itils, a description of Lake superior, us well as a specimen of its copper; and further. Lake Superior is first shown on a map by champlain in Klli'J. It is probable that the Ojibwa Indians were the ones with whom Brule came in contact on Lake Superior at that time (see Neill, in Minn. Hist. Colls., vol. v., pp. 399-405). Again, Warren fixes tint date of the treaty between the Ojibwa and the Dakota, after the former bad driven the Dakota from the rice lakes of St Croix river, nt about the year K',95. Warren's editor calls attention to the fact that La Harpe wrote that Le Hueiir in 1095 built a fort on an island in the Mississippi about 200 leagues above Illinois river in order to efTeet a treaty between the Sautenrs (Ojibwa) and the Sioux (Dakota) (Warren, op. eit., p. 163 and note).
in 10 WILD HICK (1ATHKRKKS OK 1'IM'KK LAKES [ETH.ANN.19
A-sinihoin and the Kinisteno or Cree. and from there joined their southern kinsmen against the hitter's enemies, the Dakota. The .second or .-outhi-rn division, after leaving Sault Ste Marie, pushed westward along the south shore of Lake Superior, stopping temporarily at . (irand i-land. L'Anse. and finally at " Shaiig-ah-waum-ik-ong " or Chequamegon bay.
Warren says that it was while the Ojibwa were still at Sault Ste Marie that they and the Dakota first met. as is seen in the name which the latter gave the Ojibwa — " Ila-ra-to-oans," or "The-people-of-t he- falls." In all this westward movement south of Lake Superior the Ojibwa were surrounded by the fierce "O-dug-aum-eeg," or "Opposite- side people" (the Fox Indians), and also by the Dakota, who claimed t hf southern and western sides of the hike. Every foot of ground was valiantly contested, until at last the invaders halted near La Pointe, where they wen- compelled to seek safety on La Pointe island. It is clear, from Indian tradition, and the evidence seems trustworthy,1 that it was about three hundred and sixty years previous to 1852, the year in which Warren wrote, that the Ojibwa assembled on La Pointe
/ island. This would be about 1492. Ihere they built a village and \S \ cultivated extensive- gardens of pumpkins and maize. They also occa- sionally hunted on the mainland along the headwaters of St Croix river. They lived about a hundred and twenty years on La Pointe island, from which, after a signal victory over a war party from both of their western enemies, the Dakota and the Fox, they gained a last- ing foothold on the mainland and spread to the south and west. From early in the seventeenth century they had ascended St Law- rence river with canoe loads of furs for the French. Then they acquired tin-arms and the primitive man's craving for strong drink, and learned the exchange value of peltries in satisfying their new wants: with a force at once rapid and irresistible they plunged into the land of small lakes to the south and west, where the small furred animals were the most abundant. They destroyed the Fox villages about the headwaters of the St Croix and forced the inhabit- ants to desert their rice lakes in the midland country between St Croix and Chippewa rivers, the ejected people fleeing to Wisconsin river. The invading Ojibwa also planted a village on an island at the mouth of St Louis river at Fond du Lac. Warren places the date of these inland movements between the years 1(112 and 1071. In 17I>; the Fox Indians again incurred the hatred of the Ojibwa, who, with the assistance of the French, dislodged them from Wisconsin river and Lake Michigan, and drove them to the Mississippi.
The Dakota of Mdewaka" ("Spirit lake,'' Mille Lacs), were at pea.-e with the Ojibwa of Fond du Lac. but having treacherously
1 Wiinvn, up. i-it., pp. 89-90.
JENKS] THE OJIBWA 1041
murdered some of the Ojibwa from that village, they were driven from Mille Lacs by the united Ojibwa tribe. Immediately thereafter the Ojibwa began to force the Dakota from the rice lakes of St Croix river region, which they had long occupied in conjunction with the Fox Indians. In 1695 Le Sueur effected peace between the Ojibwa and the Dakota of the St Croix, who at that time lived near together and even intermarried. The Ojibwa chose Rice lake at the head of Shell river, which is a tributary of the St Croix, as their permanent settlement in the newly acquired territory, and it was still an Ojibwa village in 1852. '
Fish are very plentiful in all of the lakes about the sources of the Mississippi. The country also affords birch bark and maple sugar abun- dantly, and "in many of these lakes, which lie clustered together within an area of several hundred miles, the wild rice grows in large quanti- ties and most luxuriantly, affording the Indian an important staple of subsistence."5 After the conquest of the Mille Lacs and St Croix region the Ojibwa drove the Dakota from Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Minnesota, and made there a permanent settlement. It was subse- quently from this point, as before it was from Chequamegon bay, that the Ojibwa war parties started which eventually drove the Dakota from their favorite homes at Leech, Winnipeg, Cass, and Red lakes, as well as from Gull lake, Crow Wing, and the vicinity of Mille Lacs. The Dakota made their last determined stand upon the islands of Leech lake, but finally withdrew to the edge of the western prairies between the sources of Minnesota river and Red river of the North. By the year 1783 the Ojibwa were occupying Sandy, Leech, and Red lakes, and there was not a Dakota village above the Falls of St Anthony and east of the Mississippi. 3
The first permanent Ojibwa settlement on Ottawa lake, the site of the present Lac Courte Oreille reservation, was made about the year 1745. From there new villages were at length made at Lac Chetac, Red Cedar lake, Long lake, and " Puk-wa-wanuh on Chippeway river." At about the time that the Fox Indians were driven from Wisconsin river, the Ojibwa began to occupy this latter territory, their chief village being established at " Waus-wag-im-ing" (Torch lake, Lac du Flam- beau). From here they spread down the Wisconsin as far as the mouth of Fox river, and toward the east as far as Pelican lake. From these various places, during the last hundred years, they have spread over the remainder of northern Wisconsin and Minnesota, fighting with remnants of the Fox, Dakota, and Winnebago tribes at each advancing step. In the latter part of the eighteenth century the two bands of the Ojibwa — • the Lac Courte Oreille and Lac du Flambeau — on the sources of Chip- peway and Wisconsin rivers, respectively, numbered about a thousand
^permanent Ojibwa wigwam is illustrated in plate l.xvm, though generally, at that day. per- manent as well as temporary wigwams were of biren bark or bireh bark and matting, See plates L.xvn b, i.xxix.
2 Warren, op. pit., pp. 17M7G.
•Neill, History of the Ojibwa, p. 450.
1042 WILD HICK (lATHKKKHS OK I I'PKK I.AKKS [KTN. ANN. 19
souls. They raised Large quantities of mai/e and potatoes; •'they also collected cadi autumn large quantities of wild rice, which abounded in many of their lakes and streams."'
The following facts shed light on the importance which the Indian attached lo wild rice. Almost every bend of ( 'hippewa and Red Cedar rivers lias been the scene of an Indian battle, and each of these .streams has borne a name synonymous with "Wild-rice river." Prairie-rice lake I" Mush-ko-da-mun-o-inin-e-kan." Prairie lake. Barren county, Wisconsin) has been the scene of several battles between the Ojibwa and the Dakota. It is about 8 miles long and averages less than a quar- ter of a mile wide. It is shallow, miry -bottomed, and almost entirely covered with wild rice, which is so thick and luxuriant that the Indians have to cut paths through it for their canoes. ''From the manner in which they gather the rice, and the quantity which a family "•cue rally collects during the harvesting season, this lake alone would supply a body of li.ooo Indians."- From the earliest period of their occupation of the Chippewa river country, the most fearless of the Ojibwa came to this lake each fall of the year to collect a portion of the abundant rice crop, notwithstanding its close vicinity to the Dakota villages, and notwithstanding that they lost lives from the sudden attacks of the Dakota almost yearly.3
Some of the Ojibwa villages near the wild-rice fields were named '• Wild-rice village." In 1852 Warren' said that the Ojibwa living on " Rice" lakes of the St C'roix were called " Mun-o-min-ik-a-sheenh-ug, or Rice-makers." In IN:!!. Schooleraft, in naming the Ojibwa bands, mentioned the " Folle Avoine country" as including Lac du Flambeau, Ottowa lake. Yellow river. " Nama Kowagun " of St Croix river, and Snake river." Indeed, the French called the Indians of all this section of country— the river sources of northern Wisconsin — the "Fols Avoin Sauteurs."' Arrow-smith's map (London, 1796; additions, IMIL') slums the Ojibwa occupying the territory both north and south of Lake Superior, and shows Burntwood river (Bois Brule") as the "passage into the country of the Wild Rice Indians." It leads to the headwaters of St Croix river, half-way down the course of which is ;i ••('hippeway village called the Rice people."
About III.IMIU Ojibwa Indians had access to wild rice from the time they drove the Fox Indians out of the wild-rice fields until, say. the year IM'.'.. or in round numbers t»vo hundred years, and this is about the present Ojibwa population in the United States who use wild rice.7
1 Wunvn, IP|P. fit., p. 299. . |p|p.:!0»-310.
• IMA
" pit-™ ft, Xiirnitivi', appendix, JP..-PTI;. -. I'ikc, M.I. [,pp.M ^.rtal.l.. wimvuins in which ttMM I.,.li,,ns vKit thf ric,- li.-I.N ure illllstrntf.1 in plates LXVII
UJ
I
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o tr
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LU
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UJ
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UJ
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O O
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LU
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LU
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CC Q
JKRK8] DAKOTA MIGRATIONS 1043
THE DAKOTA
Ethnologists have shown that the Indian tribes of the Siouan lin- guistic stock at one time occupied the Piedmont and coastwise areas between the Appalachian range and the Atlantic in the present states of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.1 Allen2 has proved that the bison, prior to the year LSOO, had crossed the Appalachians from the west and occupied the Piedmont area, entering this region probably by the way of Cumberland gap. W J McGee3 puts these two facts together, and suggests that the bison led the ancestors ot the Dakota, one of the Siouan-speaking tribes, from the Piedmont into the western prairies, where history found them. Hale4 suggests that the valley of Ohio river and of Big Sandy river, which flows into the Ohio and whose headwaters almost interlace those of the southerly flowing Cape Fear river, was the thoroughfare of these Indians and tin- bison. Further than this, Allen points out on the map accom- panying his memoir that prior to 1800 bison had occupied the western part of Wisconsin as far north as the highlands, and all of Minnesota except the northeastern poi'tion. Thus they could easily have led the Siouan stock through Cumberland gap, the thoroughfare sug- gested by Hale, across the best pasture lands of America, the blue grass of Kentucky and the prairies of Indiana and Illinois, into the territory under consideration.
It is believed, however, that the Dakota were not much given to buffalo hunting until they came into the prairie region west of the Mi-sissippi river, where they became distinctly a buffalo-hunting people. Mr James Mooney suggested to the writer, after this memoir was written, that the Siouan ancestors were literally pinched out of their home in the east. The Iroquoian stock on the north and the Algonquian on the south of them drew in like the approaching sides of a triangle, and they were obliged to flee westward or perish.
It must further be noted that the Dakota, or that division of the Siouan stock which opposed the westward migration of the Ojibwa, were more of the nature of plains Indians than of river Indians. None of the early travelers, including the Jesuit fathers, speak of them as having homes farther east than St Croix river. They all speak of them as settled west of Lake Superior. To be sure the Dakota roamed over all of Wisconsin, even to Sault Ste Marie and to Green bay; and as late as 1696 they attacked the Indians in Michigan around the southern end of Lake Michigan, but their instincts were clearly those of nomads. With the exception of the Siouan-speaking Winnebago
1 Horatio Hale, The Tutelo Tribe and Language, Proe. Am. Philos. Soc., vol. xxi.lXKi-x-i; we aNn .lames Mooney, Sioimn Tribes of the East, bulletin of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1XD4, and Horatio Hale-. Indian Migrations. Am. Anti'iuarian. January and April, iss:i.
'-Tlie American Bisons Living and Kxtinct.
"ThcSionx Indians; A Preliminary Sketch, Fifteenth Ann. Kept. Bu. Amur. KthnoL.p. 173.
* Indian Migrations, op. cit., p. 3.
1044 WILD KICK OATHKRKKS OF I'l'I'KR LAKES IKTII.ANN .111
Indian-, part of tin- Maiulan. and a few of tin' Dakota, the entire \\e-tern Simian stock seems to have dung to the hunter life of the plains.
A straight line drawn from the foot of Lake Michigan to the foot of Lake Superior (Fond du Lac) marks the early eastern boundary of the l)ison country in the wild-rice district. Near Madison, Wisconsin, this boundary line bends slightly west of a straight line, while farther north it bends to the east so as virtually to cover the headwaters of Chippewa and St Croix rivers. It is thus seen that the Dakota were on the border line. They were acquiring a taste for wild rice, though they had not cultivated the soil in any way, and they still kept up their fondness for the bison with which they were surrounded when the Ojibwa began to force them westward south of La Pointe island. Though the Dakota fought doggedly, the Ojibwa obtained firearms at an earlier period and in greater numbers than they, and in the end were successful. Previous to the year 1776 Perrot built a fort at Lake Pepin, and Neill ' said of the French at this fort: "Through their influence the Dakota began to be led away from the rice grounds of the Mille Lacs region."
Anothercause aided the Ojibwa toward the latter end of this struggle. A- -non as the Dakota acquired horses they turned more readilv to their employment of hunting the bison. They came in possession of horses near the opening of the nineteenth century. About the year 17i'p»; Carver said that the Dakota method of hunting the bison was to form a circle around a herd and then set the grass on fire. Few of the animals escaped.'-' Evidently the Dakota were then horseless. Again In- siid of the Indians still farther south and west: "Having great plenty of horfes. they always attack their enemy on horfeback."" And later. "The Naudoweffies | Dakota], who had been at war with this peo- ple, informed me. that unlefs they found nioraffes or thickets to which to ret ire. they were fureof being cutoff: to prevent this they always took care wherever they mad.' an onfet, to do it near fuch [places] as were impaffable for cavalry." Lewis and Clarke wrote in 1804-lsoi; that dogs were still the beasts of burden used by the Dakota. Their "lodges may be taken to pieces, packed up. and carried with the nation wherever the\ go. by dogs which bear great burdens."4 Later they wrote that the Dakota frequently made incursions among the Mandan Indians to steal horses.-" and that " the horses of the Mandans are so often stolen by the Sioux. Kicaras. and A-sinihoins, that the invariable rule now is to put the hor-e> every night into the same lodge with the family."1'' According to M:illery the Dakota winter counts show that the Dakota first -aw and stole horses wearing shoes in the winter of lM)i'
'NYill. Indian Tnuli'. in Annuls. .f ()„• Minn. Hist. s.x-., 1S.VJ, |,. ;t>
ID 171*;, 1777. 177S.|,.L>>7. IIWd 'Ibid.. ,,.17.-,.
i Oows, Lewb ud Cluke, p. UO. ,,||,j,i ,, .,:1;1
JEXKS] THE DAKOTA 1045
In the winter of 1811-1812 they caught many wild horses south of Platto river, and in the following winter they used riatas to catch wild horses. '
So, while during the early incursions of the Ojibwa into the wild- rice fields of the Dakota these fields were worth defending, yet they became less so when the horse came to carry the bison-loving Dakota into the great pasture lands of the western prairies.
However, wild rice played no small part in the household economy of the Dakota Indians, those east of the Mississippi doubtless using it n in re than the others. A French author, probably of the first quarter of the seventeenth century, wrote that there were five village districts of these Indians. ''The Ouatabatonha (River Sioux) live by the St Croix river or on the Wildrice lake, which is below and 15 leagues from the Riviere an Serpent . . . -The Menesouhakatoha (or lake Sioux) . . . The Natatoha (or prairie Sioux) . . . The Hictoha (or hunting Sioux) . . . The Titoha (or prairie Sioux)." The five vil- lages numbered 1,200 men, or about 6,000 or 7,000 souls. These were the only Dakota with whom there was any considerable commerce at the time. Others farther west would be little known, but the five villages of 6,000 or 7,000 souls were doubtless about the only Dakota who had access to wild rice. This number must again be reduced, for the Titoha village was situated 50 leagues west of St Anthony falls, hence probably did not use the grain, while it is recorded that the people of other four villages did not cultivate the soil, but were roving about and lived on game, fish', and wild rice.2 This leaves some 5,000 or 6,000 of these Indians who used wild rice.
Previous to this Perrot said that they occupied a country of nothing but lakes and marshes rilled with wild rice. It lay for 50 or more leagues square (19,000 or 20,000 square miles) on both sides of the Mississippi:
11 est ;\ remarquer que le pays ou ils [the Dakota] sont n'est autre chose que lacs i'l inai-ests, remplis de folles avoines, s<>pares les tins des autres par petites lan- gues dc terre qui n'ont tout an plus d'un lac a 1'autre que trente a quarante pas, et d'autres cinq a, six ou uu pen plus. Ces lacs ou marests contiennent ciuquante lieues ot davantage en earre, et ne sout s£par6s par aucune riviere que par celle de la Louiaianne (le Mississippi) , qui a son lit dans le milieu, ou une partie de leurs eaux vifiii se degorger. D'autres tombent dans la riviere de Saint Croix, qui est situee a leur cgard an nord-est, et les range de pres. Enfin les autres marests et lacs situez a 1'oiirstde la riviere de Saint Pierre s'y vont jetter pareillenient; si l>ienque les Scioux soni inaccessible* dans un pays si man'cageux, et ne peuvent y estre deiruits que par des cniiemis ayanl des eannots coinnie eux pour les poursnivre; parceque dans ces cndroits il n'y a que cinq ou six families ensemble, que forment coinnic un gros, ou une (•>]«'•(•!• de petit village, et touts les autres sont de mesme eloignez il une certaine distance, atin d'estre a portee de se pouvoir prester la main a la premiere alarme. Si quelqu'une de ces petites V>ourgades est attaquee, 1'ennemy n'en peut deffaire quo
1 I'irtot-nij.liy t.f tlic N. Am. Indians, Fourth Ann. Kept. Bur. Eth.,p. 89 et seq. Neill, Memoir of tliu Sioux, p. 235.
10. lt'> \VII.I) KICK tlATHKKKKS (IK I'l'l'KR LAKES [KTII. AXN.I'J
tnV IH-U. parcci|Uc tons les \oysius se troiivcnt a.-semblex t..nt d'nn coup. cl don-
neiit tin prompt M-roiir- on il e-l bcsoin. \jl methode (prils out pour navii:ucr dans
• de couper .levant leiir- scmcnces, a\ -ec leiirs cannots. et. Irs
i .!<• lac i-ii lac, ils ohliirent I'ennemy <|iii vent 1'iiir a tonrner antonr; ijui vont
tonsjours il'im lac- a 1111 autrc. jns.in'a cc .|ii'ils les ayenl tons passe*. el <|ii'ils soieiit
arrive/. a la irrande tern1.1
lii Iti.V.i Kadisson wrote of tin- Dakota:
<• L' moons alter tin-re rame S amhaffadors fr ..... the nation of Nadonefer. moiis
-ta] that we will call now the Nation of the U-el'e. Thofe men each had i
wiv.-. loade<l of Oats [wild riee], conic that Crowes in that c, mi it rev, of a fmall quan-
tity (if Indian Corne, w"1 other grains, i\c it was to ]>refent to ns, w'1'1 we received as a
nn-at favour .<c token of Criendfhippe.1
In I'M 1 \vc n-ad thai "llii'v content tlicnisclvcs with a kind of marsh rye. that we call t'olle avoine. which the prairies supply spontaneously."'
Iii ihe latter part of (he se\ i-ntccntli century Li> Siu'iir wrote much reo-anlnio- the use of wild rice liy tlie Dakota. S(>veral references to his remarks will he made later: one. however, is now given. Le Sueur had huilt a fort on the Upper Mississippi in order to effect a treaty between the Ojiliwa and Dakota, and on December 12,, which would lie after the harvest season for wild rice, three Mendeouacanton (M'lewaka"to"wa") chiefs came to tell him that the next summer, after having built canoes and gathered their wild rice, thev would move near the French. La Ilarpe wrote, " et prouiirent qtie Fete siiivant. a])res avoir construit des canoLs et fait leur recolte de folle iivoine. ils vicndraicnt s'etablir aii])res des Francais."*
Harly in the nineteeiitli century Pike recorded that —
The Minowa Kantonijs are the only hand of Sioux wh.. use canoes, and by far the most civili/.ed. U-iu^ the only ..lies who ever luiilt loj.' huts, or cultivated any species of vegetables, and amonj; those only a very small quantity of corn and heans; for, although I \\as «ith them in Septemlier ar.d I >ctot>er, I never saw one kettle of either, thev always nsinn wild oats [wild rice] for bread. This production nature ha- furnished to all the most uncultivated nation." of the X. W. continent, who may pither in autumn a sufficiency which, when added to the productions of the chase and the net. insures them a subsistence through all the seasons of the year.-''
This band are reported the bravest of all the Sioux, and have for years IK-CU oppom-d to the l-'ols Avoin Santeurs. who are reported the bravest of all the numer- ous hands of Chippev .
They resided from Prairie du Chien for 35 miles up Minnesota rher. The Kahra. a Dakota band, are called by Coues the " Wild Rice SU-etons."' They extended from White Hock to Big Stone, or Inyantonka lake, on Minnesota river.
A little later Schooleraft presented the following facts:
l-'.v.-n during the lirst part of the nineteenth century the Dakota, who ..... istitnted the trilx- of lake ].eo],l -, the Mendewakantons. were united in three villages. The
i M,-.I ii. ,ii,- -ur ir> M.i.irs. cniMmiii-!. .-i liriiiKicni d« 8»aT«gw de ]• Am#riqne Septentrionale ].nr
Si.-.it., i ./.i« mill I'uriN, IM;I. pp. -
v"v '-'-• I'--1"1"- »Com-s. I-ik,-. vol. i ,, 3-14
!'•-• liiTl. '!' p, -M 'Ml.i.l.. pp. -j|-j -Jill
<lji IlHrp.-, .li.uriiul lli>iiiri.|ii. • Il.id.. p. illy, note
.IENKS] THE MENOMINI 1047
first was east of the Mississippi and about 4 mik's from the Minnesota river. The second was on the Mississippi river. The third was on both sides of the Minnesota, about. l> miles from its mouth. Lying near the intersection of the roads between these three villages were the low grounds and marshes of sugar maple and wild rice, and here the villagers assembled to make sugar in the spring and to gather rice in the autumn.1
The fierce struggle of the Dakota with the Ojibwa at the rice fields is a measure of the value they put upon them. Among them, as among the Ojibwa, there were rice villages. La Harpe mentions three such, as follow: "Lea Psioumaniton.s, village des chercheurs de folle avoino" (village of wild rice gatherers), "les Psinchatons, village de la folle avoine rouge" (village of the red wild rice), and "les Psinontanhinhintons, village de la grande folle avoine" (the great wild-rice village).2 He mentions nine Dakota villages west and seven east of the Mississippi. It has been asserted that from the year 1800 until 1851, when they were removed to Redwood reservation in western Minnesota, the Dakota east of the Mississippi, to the number of 2,000, used wild rice largely. "Even after that a considerable number would visit the rice fields every fall to gather what they could 'til 1862, when the Minnesota massacre occurred, and they were removed to the Minnesota river. A few stragglers remaining in Minnesota still gather some."3 The above letter does not speak of rice gathering by the western Dakota, but two of the wild-rice villages mentioned by La Harpe were west of the Mississippi, and, as has been shown and will be shown later from the testimony of maps, Minnesota river had immense wild-rice fields, while a few bodies of water west of the Mis- sissippi bear the Dakota name for wild rice.
Considering all the data presented, it is probable that the estimate of 2. •)()(• wild rice producing Dakota Indians is too conservative for the earlier part of the nineteenth century; and it is believed that between 5,000 and 7,000 Dakota Indians used wild rice at the time the Ojibwa were nominally in control of the territory east of the Mississippi. None of the Dakota Indians on reservations have access to wild rice at the present time.
THE MENOMINI
From the point of view of the present memoir the Menomini Indians are unique. From the year 1634 they have consumed wild rice in large quantities. Unlike other Indians who, for short periods, have been named because of their intimate relations with the grain, the Menomini have always been known, so far as Indian tradition and authentic history are concerned, as the "Wild-rice Indians" par excellence.
1 Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. n, p. 97. s La Harpe, Journal Historique, pp. 09, 70.
" Letter of KevcTeml John I'. Williamson, Greenwood, South Dakota, January 21, IS'JU. Mr Wil- liamson anil his father before him Inive been lifelong missionaries to the Dakota Indians.
1048 WILD RICE OATHKKKRS OK ri'I'KK LAKES [BTH.ANN.W
In n;:',4. when SiiMir .lean Nicollet tir.-t visited Green bay. li<' found there a trilic of Indians lighter in complexion than their neighbors and remarkably well formed. They .subsisted largely on wild rice, called "in their language niiinniiiii from which they took their name; their own term being Onianomiiiewak (Wild rice men)."1 According to Hoffman the word "Menomini" is derived from Omd'no>//i/n"U (maim' a,, , rice, and /W //<<"/ (»• /////'/,/', man). This is the name of the tribe in their own language, the AlgoiH|uian, though they pronounce it more as though it were spelled '' Menomoni." The French named them "Folle Avoine." "Wild, Mad, or False Oat." From the above Indian and French terms and their English translations Hoffman records eighty-four synonyms by which these Indians have been known in written history.2 Inasmuch as these synonyms are accessible in his monograph, they are not reproduced here, but a few synonyms sup- plementary to his list are presented:
FM.I.ISVVOISKS. Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. XH, p. 78.
FACL.SAVOIXS. Ibid., vol. xm, p. 443.
Fcii.i.AvoixK. Ibid., vol. xi, p. 265.
FOI.I.K AVOIXI. Buchanan, James, Sketches of the History, Manners, and Customs of the North American Indians, vol. v, p. 139 (New York, 1824).
FOLLOWKXS. Lonjr, Voyages, p. 146.
MAIIXOMONKKI;. Tanner, Narrative, p. 315.
,M U.IIOIN.MI. Carte I'articnliere <lu Fleuve Saint Louis . . . avec lea noms des Sauvages du pais, des Marchandises, 1750-60.
MAMIOXMIXKN. Radisson, Voyages, p. 201.
M AI.OMIXE. DC Vaiiftcmdy, map, Amerique Septentrionale, 1750.
M \\OMIXIS. Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. xii, p. 79.
M.> \OMOMS. Map, The Upper Territories of the United States, in Carey's Gen- eral Atlas, Phila., 1814.
Mi NOMIXEKS. Atwater, Indians of the Northwest, p. 81.
OMAXOMIXKWAK. Kntutbauer in Am. Cath. Hist. Rasearches, Oct., 1887, p. 152.
WILD RICE IXDIAXS. Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. i, p. 52.
Kadi-son .-aid of the Menomini late in the fifth decade of the seven- teenth century: "They wearc of a nation called Malhonmines; that is, the nation of Oats, graine y' is much in y' countrey."3 Charlevoix, in 17i!l. wrote of an island on the western side of Green bay, "upon which is the Village of the Malhomines. which the French call folles Avoines. (wild Oats), probably beeanfe they make their common Food of this (irain."' I-' mm that time until the present there is frequent evidence that these Indians depended greatly upon wild rice. A few
instances will I ited. Major Irwin wrote of them in 1820: "The
Canadians designate them FolU-avoine. . . . wild oats, or rice. This is one of the principal articles on which the Indians subsist in this quarter. It is to be found in great abundance, in the fall of the .Vriir • • ^ is believed that enough of it could be gathered in the fall.
' Kriiiitlmll.T, in AimTinili Cutholir HMorinil K,..s,.,iivh«l, Oct., 1887 p 152 HolTnmu. Tin- M..tioi,,i,,i In.liui,-. F.iun, . ml, A.nnml ((,.,,« of th,'. Hun'ali ,,f Klhi,,,l,,Ky, part 1,
m. Voyage,, ,,. an. , Clmrl,voix. Voy,1K,. to c.,,m,|«. l,,,t,,r x,x, p.202.
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THE MENOMINI
1049
to support several thousand Indians, for one year."1 He continued: "In the spring they subsist on sugar and fish; in the summer on fish and game; in the fall, on wild rice, and corn, and in the winter on fish and ganie. Those who are provident, have some rice during the win- ter."" In 1829 wild rice furnished them abundant subsistence.3 Gov- ernor Dodge said of them in 1837-38, the)^ " raise corn on the Oconte, Menominee, and Fox rivers, in small quantities, but depend on the chase, fishing, fowling, and gathering of wild rice for subsistence."* Exactly similar reports were made for the years 1844 and 1845.6
These Indians are of the Algonquian linguistic stock, and for over two hundred and sixty years have been known to live in Wisconsin near Green bay. It is not known that they came westward with their kins- men, the Ojibwa, Ottawa, and Potawatomi, but it seems probable that they preceded these others into the wild-rice district. Their habitat has shifted from the Menominee river on the north, between the upper peninsula of Michigan and Wisconsin, where their traditions fix the origin of the tribe, back and forth over the territory west of Green bay as far south as Fox river and Lake Winnebago. In 1852 they moved to their present reservation of ten townships, some 360 square miles, or about 230,000 acres, located in east-central Wisconsin. In August of the following year Oshkosh, their head chief, asked the agency superintendent to permit the tribe to go back to their old rice fields to gather rice.' Most of their rice is gathered at present in Lake Shawano, which lies about 8 miles south of the reservation.
The following statistics of Menomini population have been gathered:
Year |
Warriors |
Women |
Children |
Total |
Authority |
1718 |
80-100 |
Doc. Coll. Hist. New York, vol. ix, Albany, |
|||
1761 |
150 |
1855, p. 889. Wis. Hist. Colls. , vol. 1, 1854, p. 32. |
|||
1820. . . . 1842 |
600 |
900 |
2,400 |
8,900 2,464 |
Morse, Report, New Haven, 1822, app., p. 51. Indian Affairs Report, 1843. |
1850 |
500 |
||||
1856 |
,930 |
||||
1857. . . . 1863 |
358 |
425 |
914 |
,697 ,724 |
Indian Affairs Report, 1863, p. 502. |
1872 |
,362 |
Indian Affairs Report 1872 p. 384. |
|||
1882 |
,500 |
Indian Affairs Report, 1882, p. 344. |
|||
1884. |
,400 |
Indian Affairs Report, 1884, p. 300. |
|||
1890 |
,311 |
Indian Affairs Report, 1890, p. 462. |
|||
1892.. |
1,335 |
Indian Affairs Report, 1892, p. 798. |
|||
1898 |
1,375 |
Indian AfTairs Report 1898 p 612 |
|||
'Morse, Report, app., p. 47. Dr Morse (ibid., app., pp. 51, 52) also reports eommnnications from Messrs. John Lawe, Jas. Porlier, Peter, Augustin, and Louis Grignon, and Laurent Fily to the same effect. These gentlemen were traders at Green bay and vicinity for half a century.
-'Ibid., app., p. 48.
•''House of Reps., War Dept., 20th Cong., 2d sess., House of Reps. Doc. No. 117, Indian Affairs; see also Bchooleraft, Indian Tribes, vol. in, pp. 591, 607, for the years 1829 and 1832.
« Indian Affairs Report, 1837-38, p. 16.
6 Op. cit., 1844-45, p. 131, and op. cit., 1S45, p. 494.
«Op. cit., 1853, p. 52.
1050 WILD KICK (iATHKRKRS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.AXN.W
It is believed that an average of 1,500 souls is ;i safe estimate for the number of this tribe during the last two hundred and fifty years.
Tin. SVTK AND Fox
The tribes of the Saukand Fox Indians have been closely associated for a long time. They are Algonquian, and therefore kindred to the Ojibwa and Mcnomini. It is believed that they, like the Menomini, readied the wild-rice district before the Ojibwa, and that they and all their kinsmen wore at one time driven westward by the Iroquois. These latter Indians were so tierce that the Algonquians said of them, "These are not men; these are wolves."
The Sank have been called O-saug-eeg, Ousakis, Saukies, Sakis, Sacs, or "Those who live at the entry." \Vanvn said that they were called O-dish-quag-um-eeg, or "Last-water people."1 Arm- strong wrote of the Osaukies, or "Men from the white earth or clay," that they came from Canada by way of Michigan, stopping for a short time at Saginaw (Sauganaii). which was named after them. They soon came to Wisconsin and formed a lasting alliance with the Fox Indians.*
Warren called the Fox Indians O-dug-am-eeg, or "Opposite-side people," and says that they were driven westward by the Iroquois and settled southwest of Green bay. Wisconsin, where they were allies of the Sauk Indians. Armstrong spoke of them as the "Men from the red earth."' The French called the Fox Indians "des Renards," and it is through the French that the English name is derived. On a map of 1672, and also on Marquette's map of 1<>73, they are termed " STAGAMI," and are located on the present Fox river, between (iicen bay and Lake Winnebago. It has been noticed that these Indians were in villages in the wild-rice fields of St Croix and Chip- peway rivers, and that later, after being dislodged by the Ojibwa, they resided on Wisconsin river. That they were producers of wild rice is unquestioned, but it is regretted that so little is known of them during the period when they must have depended largely upon the grain.
The Sauk and Fox tribes united and migrated southwestward early in the eighteenth century. On good authority it was claimed in 1822 that more than a century previous, both of these tribes, who then inhabited the country on (ireen bay and Fox river, were conquered and driven auay by the Menomini. aided by the Ottawa and Ojibwa;
and the Me iini title to the territory is admitted to be good by these
other four tribes; that is. the Sauk, Fox, Ottawa, and Ojibwa.1
1 Warren, History of the ojihwMys. p. 32.
-noun. The Siniks ami tin- mark Hawk War, p. 9. •Armstrong, op. fit., p. 11. * Morse, Kejiort, app., p. 57.
JENKS] THE SAUK AND FOX 1051
Carver said that there was a Sauk town on the Ouiseonsin [Wiscon- sin] river near the portage to the Fox river where " they raife great quantities of Indian corn, beans, melons, &c. fo that this place is efteeraed the beft market for traders to furnifh themfelves with pro- vifions, of any within eight hundred miles of it."1 It was about the year 1730 that '' Sauk-e-nug," the Sauk capital, was built on Eock river some 3 miles south of Rock Island, Illinois. In the year 180-4 the Sauk and Fox together ceded southern Wisconsin, or such land as lay east of the Mississippi and as far south as "the mouth of the Ouiscon- sing river, and up the same to a point which shall be thirty -six miles in a direct line from the mouth of the said river; then in a direct line to the point where Fox river (a branch of the Illinois) leaves the small lake called Sakaegan; thence down the Fox river to the Illinois river, and down the same to the Mississippi." In 1825 the Sauk and Fox relinquished all claim to territory east of the Mississippi and north of Iowa river.
In 1826 it was written of the Sauk that "they don't make use of wild rice, because they have none in their country except when they procure some from the AVenebagoes or Menominie Indians."3 It is probable that neither of these tribes used wild rice extensively after about the middle of the eighteenth century, when the Fox Indians were driven from their Wisconsin river retreat.
Each of these two tribes numbered probably about 1,500 or 2,000 souls during the period when they produced wild rice. In 1823 Beltrami said that there were four Fox villages along Wisconsin river, witli a total population of 1,600.3 Pike reported in 1806 that in the three Sauk villages there were 700 warriors, 750 women, 1,400 children, and probably a total number of 2,850 souls. Of the Fox Indians he said there were also three villages, and 400 warriors, 500 women, 850 children, a total, probably, of 1,750.4
THE WTINNEBAGO
The Winnebago Indians belong to the Siouan linguistic stock. They were the rear-guard of their kinsmen, the Dakota, for, while the latter, in their movement westward, passed on to the headwaters of the Mississippi and its large tributaries, the Winnebago halted near Lake M ichigan. They long occupied a strip of territory lying due east of the Mississippi to the foot of Green bay.
Schoolcraft says the Algonquian called the Puants (Winnebago) " Wee-ni-bee-gog," from the Algonquian ween-ud- (turbid or foul), and
1 Carver, Travels, p. 47.
- Account of the Manners and Customs of Die Sunk Indians i manuscript), 1820, by Thomas Forsyth (in Wisconsin Historical Society's manuscript collection), pp. 39-10.
3 Beltrami, Pilgrimage, vol. n,p. 169.
* Pike, Expeditions, table F, to face p. «i, app., part 1.
Kl.VJ \\II.1) KICK UATHKKKRS OF UPPER LAKES [KTII. ANN. ]-..
///A,,,/ (the plural form for water).1 Again he.siysthat the Winnebago rail themselves " Ilochungara," or Trout nation, and "Horoji." or Kisheaters.'' Hoffman presents a Menomini legend of the origin <>\ the name/1 While Ma'nabush. a mystic personage who instructed man- kind in the mysteries of the Mita'wit. or medicine-society, was lying a.-lcep. >ome Indians came along and stole all of bis roasting birds. He awoke in time to see some very dirty and poorly dressed Indians escaping in their canoes. "Then he called to them and railed them. calling them ' Winnibe'go ! Winnibe'go!' And by this term the Menomini have ever since designated their thievish neighbors."
Thev were at Green bay when Nicollet came there in 1(534, living in the wild-rice fields at peace with their Algonquian neighbors, the Menomini, Sauk, Fox, Maskotin, Ottawa, Ojibwa, Potawatomi, and K ickapoo. Schoolcraf t says that their earliest traditions place them at Hed banks, on the eastern shore of Green bay. There is no doubt, however, that they came into this territory with their Dakota kins- men, and through preference exchanged the habitat of the prairies for the forests, lakes, and rivers. Lake Winnebago and Winnebago county, Wisconsin, mark their old habitat; in 1658 they were called "Ouinipegouek." and occupied this territory.4 It is impossible to locate with accuracy any of these early Wisconsin and Minnesota tribes, as their possessions, or claims to possessions, greatlv over- lapped, and opportunities for correct map-making of the Northwest in the early days of its settlement were far from the best.
The Winnebago have been producers of large quantities of wild rice; in fact it has been, and still is, a staple food with many of them. These Indians ceded their Wisconsin lands, and many of them took a reser- vation in Minnesota in 18o!);5 but they gradually returned, and in 1897 t lie re were 1,447 of them scattered along Black river and its vicinity in Wi.-consin. These are the only Winnebago now in the wild-rice district. Of the numerous Indians of this tribe near the Tomah Indian school in Monroe county. Wisconsin, the school superintendent, under date of August -25, 1898, wrote: "The Winnebago Indians here are nearly all full-bloods, and they are about as far from civilization as they wen fifty years ago.1'8 The Winnebago in a winter village near Kirov . .luneaii county, Wisconsin, in the winter of 1,S<»8-!M), said that they now gat her annually large quan titles of wild rice in the sloughs of the Mississippi at La Crosse. Wisconsin, and also on the Iowa side of the stream.
'I he following estimates of Winnebago population have been made.
'ISrhtNilrnift. Iniliun Trib.".. vol. in, p. 277.
rol.I.p.277.
••'lli.llnmii. The Mciioiniiii Indians, op. clt., p.206. ' I'* p. 21.
ItMliiiii I-amHVsMon- in ihrl'nin-d BttMB,ln tin: Eighteenth Annual Report of Hi- IlMr-'itu of ATM. TH-UII KUnmln^y, pnrt 2. •Indian Attains KI'IMIFI. iv.is. ii.ii'.'.i.
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Pike reported that in 1806 there were 450 warriors, 500 women, and l.ouu children a total population of 1,950 in the seven Winnebago villages.1 In 1812 it was said that there were 700 warriors, 1,000 women, and 1,800 children, or a total of 2,800, while in 1820 there were 900 warriors, 1,300 women, and 3, (500 children, a total of 5,800.2 Probably 2,000 souls is a very conservative estimate of the number of Indians of this tribe who used wild rice during the period with which this memoir deals.
THE POTAWATOMI
It will be remembered that the Potawatomi (Potewa'tmik) are mem- bers of the great Algonquian stock, which comprised also the Ojibwa and Ottawa, and which split into three sections at Sault Ste Marie. The present Indians, the ''Potta-wat-um-ees," or "Those-who-make-or- keep-a-fire," came southward along the west shore of Green bay and Luke Michigan after the separation alluded to. In 1658 they were reported to be the nearest tribe to the settlement of St Michel near the head of Green bay.3 They were then called Oupouteouatamik, and numbered 700 men, or 3,000 souls, including 100 of the Petun or Tobacco tribe. Manjuette's map of 1(573 places the PSTESTAMI (Potawatomi) between Green bay and Lake Michigan. They undoubtedly consumed wild rice at this time, were noted as traders, and were the middle- men between the French and Indians farther inland. Their trading instinct doubtless in large measure explains their departure, for when the French settled at Detroit, some of the Potawatomi followed them there; others stopped at St Joseph river, Michigan, where they pro- duced wild rice (to which numerous references will later be made); still others stopped at Chicago, where they used wild rice, as will also lie shown.
Though none of this tribe resides on a reservation in the wild-rice district, yet in 1883 it was said that 280 of them were nomads in Wis- consin, and in 1897 the same estimate of population was made. Doubt- less 2,000 or 2,500 of these Indians consumed wild rice at one time.
THE MASKOTIN
In 1658 Pere Gabriel Druillettes spoke of the "Makoutensak," the Maskotin. as being the third "nation" west of St Michel at Green bay. A map of 1672 places the "Mascoutens on Nation du Feu" along the southwest side of Lake Winnebago. On Marquette's map of 1673 the MASKSTKNS are on Fox river above Lake Winnebago. In 17ls the " Fen" were at Chicagou (Chicago), according to a French map.4 Hennepin's map of 1687 places the Mascoutens, or Nation du Feu, south of the mouth of Fox river. According to others they
1 Pike. up. rit. s Relations ties .K-suitus, 105s, p. IM.
-Morse. Kcpc.ri, app., p. 59. Tnrtedela Louisiana ut ilu fours ilu Uississipi.
19 ETII, FT 2—01 32
lit:>4 WILD KICK GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [KTH.ANN.IO
were south of Green bay in 1 ~'M \\ ith su warriors, and in ITCU Hutchins report* tin-in still then-, Imt with 500 people. A map of the middle of tin- eighteenth century locates them south of Wisconsin river.1 They then vanished from history. It is somet lines maintained that they allied themselves with the Kickapoo and disappeared among them. School- craft says that the Ojibwa and Ottawa drove them southward as they invaded Wisconsin. '' and that among the traditions of the Algonquian tribo which inhabit the shores of the upper lakes is one that they drove to the south, into the present area of Wisconsin and Illinois, two unknown tribes whose names are " Miscotins" and "Assigunaigs."3 In 1(171 Father Alloue/ quotes a "master of a Maskotin feast" as saying "they [the Dakota] have eaten me to the bones, and have not left me a single one of my family in life." In Allow-/' words, "il sembloit que ee fust un festin pour combattre, et non pas pour manger '. . . Vous avc/ entendu parler des peuples qu'on appelle Nadoiiessi; ils rn'ont mange jusqu'aux os, et ne m'ont pas laiss£ un seul de ma famille en vie." ' Thus at that early date the Maskotin were sorely pressed !>y a tierce and powerful enemy, but it can scarcely be doubted that these Indians, in considerable numbers, occupied the wild-rice region of Wisconsin prior to its occupancy by the Sank. Fox. and Dakota Indians, as these latter are known to have occupied it before they were driven out by the Menomini and Ojibwa. '
TDK ASSIXIBOIN
The "Assinipoualaks" (Assiniboin) or " Warriors of the rocks." are a Siouan tribe which, perhaps in the sixteenth century, after quarrel- ing with their kinsmen, the Dakota, sought refuge among the ,/**/// or rocks of the Lake of the Woods. Prof. W J McGee says they M -pa rated from the Yanktonai Sioux.6 It will be remembered that the division of the Ojibwa which went westward along the northern shore of Lake Superior found the Assiniboin and formed a lasting peace with them. According to Warren this would have been in the latter part of the fifteenth century: and a letter which appears to have been written at Fort Bourbon on Hudson bay about 1695 says that the Assiniboin separated from the Dakota a long time ago. It reads: "On pretend meme que ces Assinibocls sont une Nation Sciouse, qui B'en e-t -epan'e il y a long-temps."7 It is therefore believed that the
1 Map of Amrririi, Jului Huwli-. A. Son. London [1740-1750].
-ScliiKilcnift, Iinliiiii Tritifs, vul. vi.i' '!.. VM|. 1. 1 ,.306.
<Ki'lnti<in-(l.-s.!,-Miiti>. H',71. p. II,.
•Mr .luini-s Mi»piicy. inn r.-c.Mil mm .T>alii,n, ailvanci-.l tin- |,laiisil,lf theory, tluit this iriln- ua^a I'otawatomi |«>,,plv. railed l,y tin- n'coKni/i-,i I'olawat.nni Lands Mushkodrn'suk i,r i Liltli-i I'rairie |,i-o|,lr. Tlii-> niv IM,« .in :i i.-rrvaticin in Kan-n-.
• MoOee, I hi sic.imn Indians. Kiftwnth Alumni KeiK,rt (,f tlic Hurunu i,f Kthiinlnny, p. luo.
;- lil'mnli-, 1'ari-. 17M. vol. vi, |,. 30.
JENKS] THE KICKAPOO, OTTAWA, AND HURON 1055
Assiniboin separated from their kinsmen as early as the sixteenth century.
Marquette said, in 1670, "The Assinipouars, who have about the same language as the Nadouessi [Sioux, Dakota], are westward from the Mission of the Holy Ghost [at La Pointe, Wisconsin], at a lake fifteen or twenty days' journey distant, where they gather wild rice and where the fishing is very good."1 Perrot writes of them: "The Chiripinons, or Assiniboulas, sow wild rice in their marshes, which they afterward gather; but they can transport it home only during the period of navigation."2
THE KICKAPOO, OTTAWA. AND HURON
Besides the Indians previously considered in this chapter, the.-e were several thousand Kickapoo, Ottawa, Huron, and other Indians who lived among them in the wild-rice district.
According to maps of the years 1718, 1740-1750, and 1755, the "Outaouacs" (Ottawa) were a short distance south of Lake Superior. Their numbers at the time are not known.
Radisson and Groseilliers claim to have made, a year or two prior to 1660, a canoe voyage up Lake Superior as far as Chequanaegon bay, and from there to have visited a village of refugee Huron Indians living on a lake whose headwaters drained into Chippeway river. Perrot gives their number as 100. About 1660 they went to the Noquet islands at the mouth of Green bay. They moved two or three times more in the northwest, and finally went to Detroit. They were in Wisconsin probably from about 1652 to 1670.3
Before 1716 the Kickapoo were reported on the west side of Green bay on the present Fox river.4 A map of 1720 represents them south of Green bay, while the territory occupied by them in 1716 had a Kikalin village.5 The map last cited has also " Villages of 4 Nations" near the mouth of Fox river.
In this chapter only the most conservative estimates of Indian populations have been given, and by these it is proved that fully 30,000 Indians used wild rice at one time. Estimating the Ojibwa at 10,000, the Dakota at 6,000, the Menomini at 1,500, the Sauk and Fox at 2,500, the Winnebago at 2,000, the Potawatomi at 2,000, there are 24,000 souls. Besides these there are the Assiniboin, Maskotin, Kick- apoo. Huron, Ottawa, and others, all of whom might easily swell the number to a total of 30,000 souls.
1 Vcrwyst. Missionary Labors, Milwaukee and Chicago, 1886, p. 11M. '- I'errot. Mclnoire, p. 52.
, The Indians of Wisconsin, in Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. in, p. 125 et seq. 'Herman Moll, Map of North America, printed before 1710. •• Moll, A New Map of the North Parts of America claimed by France, 17^0.
CHAPTER IV PRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
The world is fortunate indeed tlmt it has turned its attention to the scientific and historic study of human efforts and institutions before primitive man has entirely disappeared. When attention is directed to the effort of production, one is convinced that the first act wassini|>l\ that of appropriation— as of a club to strike, a stone to throw, a hole to crawl in, fruit to eat. One can not make use of commodities in the past or in the future; he must use them in the present. The hungry primitive man was satisfied when he found food to eat. His want was a present want, but he was often hungry when he could not find the de-ired food: so at the moment when he conceived the thought of keeping food from a stock of present plenty until a time of future need he took a highly important step in the varied progress of civil- i/.ation.
In the study of vegetal food production the first attention should be given to indigenous products which require no care, or, in other words, to purelv native and spontaneous products.' Wild rice is a plant of this sort. It \va- so seldom planted and the stalks were so seldom cared for that in tin- regard it i.- near the bottom of the ladder in the ascent of cultivated plants. Production with regard to wild rice, therefore, is confined chiefly to the gathering and care of the seed. After a general description of the processes of harvesting and preparing the grain, a detailed study of each step in the production will be made, as the method- varv greatly in different localities.
The grain is matured in the latter part of August or in September. Shortlv before that time the women often go to the rice fields in their canoe.- and tie the .-landing stalks into small bunches (plate I.xx). When the grain is sufficiently mature, two persons, generally women. go together into the field.- to garner the seed. The .-talks are usually so do-e to'j-ether in the harvest field that it is impossible to use a paddle, so the canoe is pushed along by a pole. As the harvesters pass among the rice, standing 4 or ~> feet above the water, one of the women reaches out. and. by means of a stick, pulls a quantity of the -talk- down
i II i- ii"t iiicniii here Unit nil iik'ririiltiitv lu-fini with -tii'h food i>r<xlu<'t« n.« an- ]irmlu 1 *|imitn-
in KT'-nt nliimdiini-f. It is quilr prolitililf tlmt want iliil much tmvanl causing primitive int.|.lf in rnltivnti' t hi' <-nil. Si -i- \v .1 Mi-iii-i-, Tin' HfKiimiiiK "t Agriculture (Amuricau Amhr<>i«ih>
;-hitlltti.]l.(lrt,.l» ]
1066
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXX
INDIAN WOMAN ON HER WAY TO THE RICE BED TO TIE THE
STALKS
BTK« SOWING AND OTHER EARLY CARE 1057
over the side of the canoe. Then with a similar stick held in her free hand she heats the fruit head, thus knocking the grain into the bottom of the canoe. In this way the grain on both sides of the path is i >•
gathered. When one end of the canoe is full, the laborers exchange / ^r implements, the harvester becoming boatman and the boatman har- vester, and the other end of the canoe is filled on the return trip to the shore. The grain is then taken out, dried or cured, its tenacious hull is thrashed off, and, after being winnowed, it is stored away for future use.1
" In the golden-hued Wazu-pe-wee — the moon when the wild-rice is gathered;
When the leaves on the tall sugar-tree are as red as the breast of the robin,
And the red-oaks that border the lea are aflame with the fire of the sunset, .
From the wide-waving fields of wild-rice — from the meadows of Psin-ta-wak-pa- ^r
dan, Where the geese and the mallards rejoice, and grow fat on the bountiful harvest.
Came the hunters with saddles of moose and the flesh of the bear and the bison, And the women in birchen canoes well laden with rice from the meadows."
Gordon, Legends of the Northwest, pp. 58-59.
SOWING AND OTHER EARLY CARE
Perrot wrote that the Assiniboin Indians, west and northwest of Lake Winnipeg, Canada, sowed wild rice in their marshes, which they later came to gather. He says: "Les Chiripinons ou Assiniboiilas sement dans leurs marais quelques folles avoines qu'ils recueillent, mais ils n'en peuvent faire le transport chez eux que dans le temps de la navigation." :
At the present time, near Rat Portage, Ontario, there ai'e two small hikes in the vicinit3T of Shoal lake where the Indians (Ojibwa) have sown wild rice, and where they procure quite a harvest.3
The Ojibwa Indians at Rice lake, near Crandon, Forest county, Wis- consin, at times both sow the grain and weed out the large flat grass which grows among the stalks.
The Ojibwa Indians of Lac Courte Oreille reservation, Wisconsin, have a tradition that all the wild rice between their present habitat and Red river of the North has been sown by their ancestors.4 The finest harvest field now on the reservation is that of Lac Courte Oreille river. It is a sown field. Paskin', a woman estimated to be slightly over a hundred years of age, says that she remembers when wild rice was
1 Attention is called to the following published illustrations of wild rice harvesting by the Indians: 1, Ojibwa Indians: Schoolcruft Indian Tribes, vol. in, pi. 1. p. 04; ibid., vol. VI, p. 652; same by Stlckney, Indian Use of Wild Rice, American Anthropologist, vol. ix, pp. 115-121, April, 18%; 2, ( 'hicMKii Tribune, Sunday edition, October 6, 1898, p. 1. S. An early picture of the harvest: Brc^any, Relation Abregee de Quelc|iies Missions, Montreal, 185'.', p. 237. 4. Dakota Indians: Catlin, Illustra- tions of the manners, customs, and condition of the North American Indians. 10th ed., vol. n, pi. 27*. p. 2»\ London. ]«;<;. :<, Wisconsin Indians: olney, Quarto Geography, 184.9, p. 37; Bryant, Popular History of the fnited States, ls7s, vol. Tl, p. 514.
2I'errot, Memoire, p. 52.
:Tither, letter, Decembers, 1SDS.
*See chapter VI.
1058 WILD HH K (1ATHKKKKS <>F UPPER LAKES [ETH.AXX. ly
gathered in Prairie lake. I'.arron county. Wisconsin, and sown in Lake Clictak. Kice lake. Bear lake. Moose-ear lake, and I^ac Courtc Oreille river, all in the near vicinity of their reservation. All of those waters are harvest Holds for the Ojibwa of Lac Courte Oreille reservation today.
A\va'sa .-owed the grain in Lac Courte Oreille river, and his grand- children's families now harvest the crop. Several other families on the reservation gather wild rice in harvest fields which they them- selves have sown. In the fall of 1899 at least one family gathered grain with which to sow a private field.
TYING
Various reasons are assigned for tying the standing stalks into little Inmcho or sheaves while the grain is in the milk stage (plates LXXI, LXXII). The stalks are tied with strips of bark, and are left standing two or three week-- to ripen.'
Hennepin said in 1697 that the " Nadouessiou " (Dakota) Indian women at Mille Lacs. Minnesota, tie the stalks together with white- wood bark (basswood, Tilia americana) to prevent it from being all devoured by flocks of duck, swan, and teal.2 The unknown author of the Memoir of the Sioux, written some time after 1719, says that the Titoha (a Dakota tribe living 50 leagues west of St Anthony falls, in Minnesota) tie the wild rice into bundles while it is standing, m order that it may die (ripen); then when it is dead they gather it.3 In 1820 Edward Tanner wrote that the Ojibwa Indians at Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Minnesota, formerly gathered the tops into large shocks, ''to render the collecting of the grain easier when ripened. By this means they also obtained it in much larger quantities than at present."' In ls^(.) they did not tie it into bunches.
(ieneral Ellis wrote of the Indians in Green Bay county, Wisconsin: "One mode us to go into this 'standing corn' with their canoes, and taking as many stalks as they can compass with their hands, give them a twist and kink, and then turn the hunches downward, leaving them to ripen on the stalks. This gives the party twisting the bunches, a kind of pre-emption to so much of the rice, which before was all com- mon." Carver said: " Nearly about the time that it begins to turn from its milky I'tate and to ripen, they run their canoes into the midft of it. and tying hunches of it together juft below the ears with bark,
'Rodman, li-tt.T, N.nvmlKT 11, 1X9S; Schoolcraft, Snminiiry Narrative, p. l:t(l; Kleventh (Vn-u- ,,f the niil.-.l stnti->, IV.HI; ]T.dinn«. p. 340. "II. 'nil 'pin, Xouvello Deeouverie, p. 313» (fol. 0*4); Williamson, letter, November 30, 1S98; Flint,
phymd History, veil. I. pp. 84-S5; Martin Bressnni, Relation Alin'Kee de lj\i,.l,,m- MlarionB,
llrown. Wr-lrril (iiiwlteer, j>. a;7: Stun!/, letter. November '1 1 "Xelll, in MacalesterColl.Cont.Dept.of Hist., Lit., and l'ol.Sui.,ser.l, number lu St Paul 1880 pp
' Kdwiird TiiiiniT. in Detroit Gazette, li. c. uil..-r ,^, ls-.li. 'Ellij. Itei'nll.-rtions, P. ^65.
JKNKS] TYING IN SHEAVES 1059
leave it in this fituation two or three weeks longer, till it is perfectly ripe. About the latter end of September they return to the river, when each family having its feparate allotment, and being able to diftinguifh their own property by the manner of fattening the fheaves, gather in the portion that belongs to them."1 E. S. Seymour wrote: "In the first place, to protect it from black birds, they collect the grain in bunches while the grain is in the milk, and cover each bunch with a band made of the bark of the linden or bass wood tree."
The Ottawa Indians used to so tie the bunches that a pathway was left between the rows: "Vnpeu auparauant qu'elle monte en espy, les Sa images vont en Canot lier en touffes 1'herbe de ces plantes, les separaiit les vnes des autres autant d'espace qu'il en faut pour passer vn Canot lors qu'ils reuiendront en cueillir le grain."1 There is little doubt that all of the tied rice was similarly arranged in rows, as that would be the simplest manner to tie it, and would afford the easiest way to gather it when the laborers used canoes.
It is seen from the above quotations that the chief reason for tying the stalks is that the grain may be saved until it is matured. Many kinds of birds consume it with avidity when they can get at the heads, and if it is tied up it is also much less liable to be destroyed by rain or wind storms.
The care in tying is shown in a letter by Roger Patterson, govern- ment farmer of Bad River reservation, Wisconsin, -which is here (Rioted in part: "About August 15th the squaws, using small canoes, go out along the river and gather together the heads of riee, tying them with bark strings into sheaves, taking care to draw them together gently, so as not to break the stems or roots. After being tied and wrapped with bark strings so that the grain will not waste, it is left standing, supported by the stalks that are not broken, about 2 feet above the water."
The women at Lac Courte Oreille reservation tied their wild rice in the season of 1899 in the following manner: They were camping with their entire family at the field and spent several days at this particular process while the grain was in the milk (see plate LXXII). A large round ball of "bast," the bark string with which they were to tie the bunches, was ready behind them in their canoes. This ball is often a foot in diameter and is made of strings of the green inner bark of baeswood; it is so wound that it unwinds from the inside, like the modern binding twine. The string averages a quarter of an inch in width. A forked pole is used to push the canoe into the thick, heavy mass of stalks, it being impossible to paddle in such a forest, and the mud bed being too soft to allow a straight pole to be used. Then the
'Carver. Travels, p. 523.
•- Relations des.Iesuites, lfif,:i, p. 19.
3 Patterson, letter, November 2:i, 18'jx. See also Rodman, letter, February 14, 1899.
1060
WILD RICK OATHKKKKS OF IMM'EK LAKES [KTH. AXN. Ill
woman reaches out around the stalks with a curved stick and hauls them toward the side of the canoe (see figure 47). Both this sickle- shaped stick and her hands are employed to form the stalks into a hunch. When the bunch is formed the woman reaches up to her .shoulder and pulls over the bark string, which passes from the ball behind her through a loop on the back of her dress immediately below the shoulder. While holding the stalks with one hand, she lays the string down along the bunch for several inches, and, suddenly checking this movement, begins rapidly to wind the string around the stalks toward their tops. In this way she makes secure the lower end of the fastening by put- ting several wrappings of the string around it. She winds the stalks
FIG. 47— Sickle-shape sticks used to draw the stalks within reach for tying.
for about -2 feet, and then bends the top of the bunch over in the form n and fastens it to the upright part by a single loop and single knot of the string, which is then cut with a knife, and the tying proc- 688 is completed. These hunches are usually :> feet long from the lo\\est wrapping to the top of the stalks, but the .stalks are usually not tied closer than lo or 12 inches to the ends. Such long bunches are made necessary by the uneven length of the stalks. The fruit heads are quite uniformly 1 foot long. Probably one-half of the ker- nels are securely wrapped with the string, while the others, at the top of the Ktalks, are kept from jarring out by the steady support of the bunch. As much as ,s. 10, and 12 feet of the string is used to tie a single sheaf.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXXII
TIED BUNCHES OF WILD RICE
JENKSJ METHODS OF GATHERING 1061
The bunches arc made with great uniformity and regularity. A row is tied on both sides of the canoe, and when the limit of the tield is reached the laborer turns around in the canoe, and returning, ties two other rows by the side of and parallel to the last. The fields at this period are very attractive. The graceful bunches and regular rows, either straight or following the outer limits of the beds, are extremely pleasing to see.
At present the Menomini Indians tie their rice only where the water is too shallow to allow canoes to travel.
The mechanical means necessary in the process of tying are very simple. The canoe (see plate i,xxm) is indispensable. The only mate- rial spoken of which is used to tie the stalks is basswood bark in strings /
or strips. It has also been noticed that at times the stalks were held I/ together by being twisted to form a bunch. A sickle-shaped stick, about 3£ feet long, is used to draw the stalks within reach for tying.
GATHERING
The previous process, that of tying, is not an essential one in the harvest of wild-rice grain, though, as has been shown, it is not uncom- mon. The first necessary step in the entire harvest is the gathering of the seed, and, while the grain is always gathered in canoes or other craft (there is a minor exception among the Menomini), there is, in the gathering, great variety in means and method. It is usually done by women. It is customary for the families which harvest wild rice to move to the fields during the harvest period, which lasts about one month.
In the Algonquian language manominikewin means "the gathering of wild rice." ' Jfin ///"//<>/// //</7v- is " I gather wild rice;" ' manominike signifies "he gathers wild rice"2 (Wilson spells the same term munhoo- iii iniku •'). The wild-rice bag used in harvesting is called manom in '"•<//. ' In the Dakota language jmn nti means "to pitch a tent at the rice [fields],''5 while tut, /«/'// is "wild-rice wind.''6
Kadisson wrote of the Dakota: "They have a particular way to gather up that graine. Two takes a boat and two fticks, by w'h they gett y' care downe and gett the corne out of it."7
The following account came from Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Min- nesota, in 1820:
It is now gathered by two of them [women] passing around in a canoe, out* sitting ill the stern and pushing it along, while the other, with two small pointed sticks, about three feet long, collects it in by running one of the sticks into the rice, and bending it into the canoe, while with the other she threshes out the grain. This sin- does on both sides of the canoe alternately, and while it is moving.8
, otrhipn-c Dictionary. -''Riggs, Dakota-English Dictionary.
- Verwyt. (Jeotrraphicai Names, p. 393. "Gordon, Legends of the Northwest, p. 58.
"Wilson, Manual of the Ojebwa Language. ' Radisson, Voyages, p. 215.
'Baraga, op. cit. 8 Edward Tanner, in Detroit Gazette, Decembers, 1820.
1(11)2 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANK.W
General Kills wrote that the Indians in (riven Hay county. Wiscon- sin, in pushing the canoe used a "long, light, slender pole, provided with a fork at one end, to prevent its sinking too deep into the soft muddy liotloni." '
Catlin said of the, Dakota that one woman paddled the canoe while the other bent the stalks over and beat out the grain, as is told above.' The Dakota used to gather the grain and carry it home in sacks.
The Potawatomi Indians, of southwestern Michigan, gathered the grain as follows: They ''would push the boat into the thick rice, bend the tops over the boat, and pound it out with 'rawagikan.' a stick for the purpose."
The Ojibwa women of Bad river, Wisconsin, bend the tied bunches over the side of the canoe, untie the bark band, and beat out the grain with a short stick.5 It is customary to untie the bunches before beat- ing them.
At Fond du Lac (Lake Superior), Minnesota, two persons of either .-ex. or both, go out in a canoe, the forward person working it ahead with either a paddle or a forked pole. The one in the stern beats the rice out, using two sticks, one to bend the rice over and the other to beat the heads.6 Harmon saw the Indians gathering the grain " with a hooked .stick, in one hand, and a str, light one in the other."7
Again we read that the "Fols Avoines" (Menomini) west of Green bay. Wisconsin, beat the grain off into a canoe lined with blankets/ Another variation is found in that after the band about the stalks was cut and removed one of the harvesters bent the heads down over the canoe with a stick while the other with a pole beat off the grain.'1
Dr Hoffman, in his monograph, The Menomini Indians, wrote that, in IV.IL'. ''at the proper season the women, and frequently the men as well, paddle through the dense growth of wild rice along the shores of the lakes and rivers, and while one attends to the canoe, the others grasp with one hand a bunch of rice stalks, bend it over the gunwale into the boat, and beat out the ears of rice." 10 In 1899 the Memomini still gat h ered most of their rice in canoes from untied .stalks, but where the water \\as too shallow for canoes, the stalks were tied, and the grain was beaten out on mats spread upon the water between the rows. The stick with which they beat the heads is called •• pawa'qikan."
i Kllis. Ki-cdllwtions, p. uiiii.
: in, North Amcrinui Indian*. MI), n, p. '."OS.
•'Williamson. Icttrr, Xiivi'Uilii-r BO, 18 >lrr ri-nds us though the Kniin WHS taki-n li.um-
i was mrrd an<l hulled. Heraim- of th,- .laiiLrer from the ojibwa, who dominated the rice ii.-M- during the period eovered tiy the letter, it is not improbable tlmt surh was tin- ease. .'^ni.lrilcT. November 111,1898. enOD, letter. November if, 1898.
1 I 'halon. letter. In mber '-'7. 1898.
• Illinium. .loiiiiiiil. p. 1 11.'.
'Brown, Western <m/etieer, j,. 2i;T; also Flint, (ieography and History, vol. i, p. 85.
"itir. sketehes of Miniu'snii,. p. 181; si^u also Schoolcraft, Indian '1 rili.-, vol. [II, p. i;j c-t ~>;t. '"Hofliiinii, The Mrnomini Iniliuns, p. 291.
JEXKS] METHODS OF GATHERING 1063
' At Rice lake, Ontario, "two go with a birch canoe, into the thickest part of it [the rice field] and with their paddles thresh it [the grain] into their canoe."1
Again it is recorded that the Ottawa bend the bunches over the canoe and shake the grain into it: "Le temps de la moisson estant venu, ils menent leurs Canots dedans les petites allees qu'ils out prati- que"es au trauers de ces grains, et faisant pencher dedans les toufl'es amassees ensemble, les egrainnent.'"
In all of the above gathering it is simply the grain which is removed. Two instances are fo.und, however, in which the entire fruit-head is cut off and taken to the shore in the canoe, and still others in which the stalks are cut in sheaves and taken thus to the shore.
At Rice lake, Ontario, we find that "one person steered the canoe with the aid of the paddle along the edge of the rice beds, and another with a stick in one hand, and a curved sharp-edged paddle in the other, struck the heads off as they bent them over the edge of the stick; the chief art was in letting the heads fall into the canoe. ";
At Rat Portage, Ontario, sticks about 2 feet long are used by the gatherer who "strips off the heads."1 A forked pole is used to push the canoe, but the boatman sits at the bow instead of at the stern. The men and not the women gather the grain there.
At Moose-ear river, Barron county, Wisconsin, in 1892 the women and boys went through the field in canoes, and with knives cut the stalks about 2 feet long. They then tied them in bunches about half as large as a sheaf of wheat, and brought them to the shore.5 The Green Bay county, Wisconsin, Indians, who made bunches by giving them "a twist and kink," cut these bunches with knives and then brought them to the shore.6 The late Chief Pokagon wrote of the Potawatomi Indians of St Joseph river valley, Michigan, that "It [wild rice] was sometimes gathered in bundles and kept in that way for winter use."7
The Indians at Lac Courte Oreille reservation also gather what they call "green wild rice." When they are at the fields to tie the bunches they strip off the grain into their canoes by simply pulling the closed hand over the fruit-heads. This grain, then in the milk, is parched and consumed during the period immediately before the mature grain is gathered, though some families at times cure a suffi- cient quantity for consumption during the year. The grain in this state is much lighter in color than that which is cured when more mature.
'Jones, Life and Journals, pp. '.!59-2(JO; also Chamberlain, Notes on the History, Customs, ami Beliefs of the Mississagua Indians, in Journal of American Folk-Lore, vol. i, 1888, p. 155.
2 Relations des Jesuites, 1663, p, 19; also Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. I, p. 74.
3 Traill, Canadian Crusoes, p. 188. *Pither. letter, Decembers, 1898.
6 John Ilutchinson, letter, Elroy.Juneau county, Wisconsin. « Ellis, Recollections, p. 286.
7 Pokagon, letter, November 16, 1898.
1<M')4 WILD BICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [KTH.AXN.IO
Airain. as in tin1 tying of the stalks, the canoe is indispensable in the grain-gathering. At times a blanket is spread in the bottom: the canoe is propelled by a puddle, a pole, or u forked stick, sometimes the eaiioenian propels the canoe from the stern and sometimes from the how. The grain may be gathered into the canoe by one person, who may hold the stalks in one hand and beat the grain out with a stick, or with two sticks, or sometimes with a paddle; or two persons may gat her the rice, one holding the stalks over the canoe while the other beats out the grain with a pole. Again, the heads are clipped off over one of the sticks, and this is done either with another similar stick, or with a sharp-edged curved paddle. At other times the grain is shaken out. Knives are used to cut the bundles which are tied, sometimes before cutting and sometimes after.1
CURING AND DRYING
As soon as the grain is gathered it is taken to the shore, and ordi- narily the curing process begins immediately. This work also usually falls to the women. A slight movement of the stalk by bird or wind or rain will cause the grain to drop into the water when it is fully ripe, hence it must he gathered just before maturity. This necessitates that the rice be artificial!}' ripened or cured; when thus ripened it will not germinate. It is almost always necessary thus to prepare the grain in order that the tenacious hull may be easily removed.
There are three ways in which the grain is cured, viz, by the sun, by smoke and heat from a slow fire underneath it while spread on a scaffolding, and by parching or "popping" in a vessel.
The sun-dried grains become almost black, the kernels varying from black through the browns to greenish grays. The Dakota Indians of Titoha village, about 50 leagues west of St Anthony falls, Minnesota, early in the eighteenth century, sun-cured their rice.2 On Fond du Lac reservation there is a double process: After being gathered, it is taken ashore, laid on birch bark or blankets spread on the ground, and dried by the sun. After being dried, which takes about twenty- four hours, it is placed in a large copper kettle and roasted over a slow fire, being continually stirred with a paddle until the hull is thoroughly roasted, when it is ready for hulling. On Moose-ear river. Ban-on county. Wisconsin, in Isivj. after the grain was cut. tied in bundles, and brought to the shore, it was spread on a long rack to dry in the sun. The stalks were laid on the rack in two rows, each having the heads in the same direction. Next, a blanket was spread on the ground, and a ix>le was placed with its lower end on the blanket, while the other end was held at a slight angle above. Over this pole the stalks, with the now dried fruit heads, were held, and the grain
• A vi.-u ..r ih, ri, •<• liHil uftiT the si-Hiii |,lls )„,,.„ ^mil-nil is shown in plute LXXIV a -Ni-ill, M,-muiroi ilir Sioux, p. J:;D.
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JEXKS] CUKING AND DRYING 1065
was beaten out with a stick. It was again dried or cured before hulling1, but the details of the process could not be ascertained.1
The Winnebago. who still gather wild rice in large quantities, cure the grain on a rack over a slow tire.2 In 1820 the Indians around Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Minnesota, often cured their rice on a scaffolding of small poles about 3 feet high (see plates LXXIV^ and LXXVIV). This rack was covered with cedar slabs, upon which the grain was spread. A slow lire was then kept burning beneath until I y the kernels were entirely dry. It required about a day to dry a scaf- foldful. Again, mats were spread over a scaffolding, on which the rice was put and cured by a fire underneath.3 Marquette said that the Indians on Green bay cured their rice on a wooden lattice, under which they kept a small fire for several days, or until the grain was well dried.'
By the Mississagua Indians about Rice lake, Ontario, the following method was employed in 1888:
Returning to the shore, they stick into the ground pine or cedar branches, so as to form a square inelosure. Within this they drive in forked sticks, upon which cross- pieces are laid, and upon these latter mats of bass-wood or cedar-bark are placed. Under this framework a tire is then lit, and the hedge of green branches serves t<> keep in the heat. The rice is spread upon the mats, and kept turned about with the paddle until dried."'
A recent method of the Dakota was to build a scaffold from 20 to 50 feet long, 8 feet wide, and about -i feet high. This was covered with reeds and grass, upon which the grain was spread. A slow fire was then kept burning for thirty-six hours so as slightly to parch the hull." At Rat Portage, Ontario, the grain of the first day's gathering is parched, after which a scaffolding is made "with poles about eight feet high and covered . . . with cedar slabs, and over these grass, and then a layer of rice." A fire is built beneath to dry the grain.7
The parched or popped rice is lighter in color than that cured in the sun. The kernel is also swelled almost to twice the diameter of the sun-dried kernel, and much of it is slightly popped or cracked open. However, it does not open like popped corn, but most of the grains when parched have a peculiar translucent crystalline appearance. In 1820 Edward Tanner wrote: "One method of curing the rice, and that which makes it the most palatable, is by putting it in a kettle in small quantities, and hanging it over the fire until it becomes parched."8 Chamberlain says of the Mississagua Indians, above referred to:
1 Information of John Hutehinson, Elroy, .Juneau county, Wisronsin. * Information of Winncliano near Elroy, Juneau county. Wisconsin, winter village in Se\ mom, sketches of Minnesota, p. 183.
'Si,,.. i Discovery ami Exploration, p. 9; also Carver, Travels, p. 524. •' chamberlain, in Journal of American Folk- Lore, vol. 1, 188N, p. l-r»-^. M'almcr. Food Products of the North American Tnilinns. p. -l±!. M'ithcr, letter. Dcccmli'-rri. iv.is. 8 Edward Tanner, Detroit Gazette, December », 1S20.
10(it) WILD RICK GATHERERS OV UPPER LAKES [KTH.ANX.I'J
"When it is desired to parch it, the rice is placed in pots over a slow tin- until the grain hursts and shows the white, mealy center." The Ojibwa Indians of northern Wisconsin kiln-dried (i. e., parched) their rice in kettles during the fifties and sixties of the nineteenth century.2 At Bad river. Wisconsin, it is cured in kettles, but is apparently not parched, as is seen from the following: "Indians like it in dry kettles and pots over a tire until it is scorched brown. The hull will then slip off easily. ": At Rat Portage, Ontario, as soon as the men come ashore with the rice "the women commence to parch the first day's gathering in the manner corn is popped. They use a kettle over a slow tire." ' The remainder of the harvest is fire-cured on a rack. The Menomini in 1892 did not cure all the rice as soon as it was gathered; at times it was not dried until after the threshing and win- nowing.6 In 1899 the same Indians had two methods of curing the rice. Such grain as was for immediate use was parched in a kettle, while the remainder of the crop was fire-cured on racks covered with rush matting. No new phases of the curing process were learned at the Lac Courte Oreille reservation. They cure the grain both by parching in a kettle and by fire-drying on a rack, the closely laid cross sticks of which were covered with long fresh marsh grass. A birch-bark box, or mocock, is generally used to carry the grain both from the canoe to the rack and from the drying rack to the place of threshing. Although these Indians esteem the parched rice more highly than the fire-cured variety, yet, on account of the extra labor in parching, they tire-dry fully four times as much as they parch.
Not many mechanical implements are used in curing the rice. It is sun-cured on blankets, on birch bark, and on scaffolds of sticks. It is tire-cured and parched in kettles. Scaffolds are covered with sticks, cedar slabs, reeds, grass, and mats of basswood and cedar bark. These scaffolds are at times nearly surrounded by a hedge of pine or cedar branches. A paddle is used to stir tlr> grain while parching in the kettle, and also at times while drying on the rack.
THRASH INC
From the time the grain is removed from the fruit head until it is thrashed, it is covered with a close-fitting hull. The grain while in this dress appears almost exactly like a long-bearded oat (see plate i.xx vi). With few exceptions all the preceding work of harvesting is J done by the women, who, at times, are assisted by the children. Tin- work of hulling falls to the men, or now and then to the boys, only two instances being noted in which. the women did this work.
There is little question that woman was man's tirst thrashing-machine, and that her bands were first employed to separate the seeds from
' n,;,ml>,Tl;nn.,,,,.rit..|, „ Patterson, letter, November 23 1898
ntt, tetter, November 14, law *Ptth«r, letter, December 6,1898.
JENKS] METHODS OF THRASHING 1067
the fruit head and hull. It seems also true that as soon as small seed \vus gathered in any considerable quantity the feet were taught to do the work of hands. Here, then, is the invention of the treadmill thrashing-machine. This is the power mostly employed in the thrash- ing of wild rice, although sticks are used — sometimes like flails and again like churn dashers. The hull is also rubbed or shaken off in blankets and baskets.
Along the west shore of Lake Koshkonong, in Jefferson county, Wisconsin, a great many holes were yet visible in 1895 which were the basins in which the rice hulls had been tread loose from the grain, though it is questionable whether wild rice has been gathered there during the last half century. Fifty years ago Schoolcraft also reported such depressions in great numbers around Rice lake, Barren county, Wisconsin. He said: "A skin is put in these holes, which are tilled with ears. A man then treads out the grain. This appears to be the only part of rice making which is performed by the men. The women gather, dry, and winnow it."1 Edward Tanner said that in 1820 a hole was dug in the ground about a foot and a half deep and 3 feet in circumference, into which a moose skin was usually put. The rice was then put in and trodden out by an Indian. "This is very laborious work," he says, "and always devolves upon the men."5 Ellis, in speaking of the Indians in Green Bay county, Wisconsin, wrote that a hole is made to contain about 1 gallon; "the rice is then tied up in a deerskin, placed in the hole, and tramped upon with the feet till the hull is removed."3
Another variety of the treadmill is found in the following two accounts: "A hole is dug in the ground, and about a bushel of rice is put in it and covered with a deerskin. A man, steadying himself by a stake driven into the ground, jumps about on the grain until the hulls are removed."* At Lac Courte Oreille reservation, Wisconsin, two such stakes are driven into the ground and tied together. They project from the ground at an angle of about 60° and lean slightly away from the thrashing hole (see plate LXXV b). The man supports himself upon these props while treading out the grain. It is only fair to say that he tries to have a new pair of buckskin moccasins for this work — but sometimes buckskin is scarce. The thrashing holes are of two varieties. One is a simple excavation about 2 feet in diameter and 18 inches deep. This is lined with a deerskin, into which the rice is poured. The thrasher treads directly on the grain. The other kind of hole is similar in size, but is lined at the bottom with a block of wood and at the sides with hand-made slaves about half an inch thick, which overlap like clapboards. In this hole also the thrasher treads directly on the grain.
1 Srhoolcraft, Thirty YiMirs with the Imlinii Tribes, p. 385.
- Edward Tanner, Detroit Gazette, December s, i.vjo.
3 Ellis, Recollections, p.26S. * Seymour, Sketches of Minnesota, pp. 183, 1*4.
1068 WILD RICE GATHKRERS <>K t'Pl'KR LAKKS [ETII.ASX.I'J
Marqiiette said that they put the rice " in a skin of the form of a bag," after which it was tread out in a hole.' The Ottawa in the middle of the seventeenth century tread out the grain in a ditch. This thrash- ing was done immediately after the gathering, and it was cured after instead of before the thrashing: ''Quand le Canot est plein. ils vont le vuider a terre dans vne fosse preparee sur le bord de 1'eau, puis auec les pieds ils les foulentet remuentsi longtemps, que toute la balle s'en dctache.'" Another glimpse of the worker is obtained from the Dakota in the early seventies of the nineteenth century. To separate the hull from the grain a hole about a foot wide and deep was dug in the ground and lined with skins. About a peck of rice was put in at a time: an Indian stepped in and with a half jump on one foot and then on the other tread the grain free.3 A letter from Bad River reservation, Wisconsin, mentions that moccasins are worn by the Indian as he, treads the grain in a tub.4 In most places moccasins are usually worn in this work, but in the autumn of 1899 the men at Vermilion Lake reservation, Minnesota, tread their grain out barefoot, and this is their usual method. In the early part of the eighteenth century the Dakota tread out their grain in a wooden trough.5 In 1829, at Rice lake, Ontario, the boys tramped the grain in a hole lined with a deer- skin." and of these Indians the same thing is written again in 18SS. In neither case is the grain cured before it is threshed.7 However, they also thrash it in another manner, to which later reference will be made. The curing and thrashing processes were curiously combined by the Ojibwa in northern Wisconsin in the middle of the nineteenth century. A green or fresh deerskin was staked out and stretched over a quantity of coals. The rice was then poured on this suspended skin and a small boy was put to treading it.8
In 1822 the Menomini thrashed their rice in a hole lined with a deer- skin. The grain was "pounded with a stick (having a thick end to it), for the purpose of disconnecting the husk from it.'"J Hotfman wrote the -ame fads >eventy years later, saying that the hole was <> inches deep and 2 feet across.10 Again he says: "Some of the Menomini women make a special form of bag in which to beat out the rice. This bag is 2 feet wide by from IS to 20 inches deep, and is woven of bark strands. It resembles very much an old-fashioned carpetbag. After the rice is put into this, the bag is laid into a depression in the ground and beaten to separate, the hulls."'" In ISi.ttt their parched
t, iMM-ovrry mill Kxplnnition, ].. '.>.
- Kl-hlliMllSilr-.t.-uitrs. lliK), |.. 19.
•IIIKT, KiKxl Products of the North American Indians, p. ii'-j.
* I'HlliTxin. Idler. Xn vnil.r ,- 1:;, 1898. •'•Ncill. Mrmoir of tiir si, .UN. p. '*.«;. •Jonefl, I. il'r and Journals, p. "JliO.
' i 'liiimltrrliiill. Nolcs mi tin- History. < :iistom~, and lit 'lid's, p. Io5.
-.-mil!/., IcttlT. Nov.-I'll.rr '.'I.
Morse. Krjxirt. appendix, p. 17. 1 ••Ilntliimii, The Mtiiuiiiini Indians, p. J'.il.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXXV
'A, SECTION OF DRYING RACK
Jl, STAVE-LINED THRASHING HOLE FOR TREADING OUT THE GRAIN
JENKS] METHODS OF THRASHING 1069
rice was hulled by tramping in a hole in the earth. The laborer was supported by leaning upon a single stick or light post driven into the ground. But the greater part of the crop, the fire-cured grain, was thrashed otherwise. Usually 15 to 25 bushels were dumped in a ditch 10 or 15 feet long and 2 feet deep; then two men with crooked sticks, paioa'qtvikanliq'tik, Hailed the hulls loose. High screens were erected on both sides of the ditch to check the flying kernels.
At Fond du Lac. Lake Superior, the grain is "churned or pounded" with a stick "shaped like a handspike, being largest at the butt." The hole is about "knee-deep with a solid block in the bottom, the sides being lined with staves, after the fashion of a barrel and of about the same diameter. " '
Besides treading off the hulls the Indians at Lac Courte Oreille reservation thrash their grain with the churndasher-like sticks. A deep hole is lined with the previously mentioned handmade staves, or a barrel is sunk almost its full length into the ground; this is then nearly filled with the grain. One or two persons, of either sex, pound up and down with the heavy -end sticks — f requenth" holding two of them (see plate LXXVII a).
The Potawatomi of St Joseph river valley, Michigan, sometimes pounded the grain in a sack made for the purpose, and sometimes in a skin-lined hole in the earth. This instance and the ones immediately preceding and immediately following are the only ones in which reference is made to the women as thrashers. The late Chief Pokagon wrote that this work was done by the women and children, and some- times by the men.2
The Winnebago thrash their rice on a blanket laid upon the ground; around three sides of this blanket a cloth screen 2 or 3 feet high is erected in order to confine the flying kernels. The thrasher, man or woman, sits at the open side of the blanket with a stick in each hand and flails the grain.3 Hoffman refers to exactly the same process for the Menomini in 1892, except that mats are used on the ground and for screens, and a depression is dug, into which the ground mat is laid.* The present Mississagua Indians thrash their rice also by shaking it in large open baskets after the grain has been thoroughly dried.5
Carver wrote that after the grain was cured the Indians trod or rubbed off the hull.6 Williamson says that the Dakota beat the grain until the hulls burst, when they will rub off.7 About 1840 the Pot- awatomi at Grass lake, Lake county, Illinois, had two ways of hulling their rice. One method was employed immediately after gathering,
1 Phalon, letter, December 27, 1898.
2 Pokagon, letter, November IB, 1898.
"- Information from Winnebago near Elroy, Juneau county, Wisconsin, winter 1898-99.
4 Hoffman, op. cit., p. 291.
5 Chamberlain, op. cit., p. 155. 0 Carver, Travels, p. 524.
'Williamson, letter, November 30, 1X99; also Kinzie, Wau-Bun, p. 67.
19 ETH, PT 2—01 33
1070 WILD RICE GATHKRKRS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANN.19
when the grain was roasted on hot, flat stones, thus causing the hulls to crack and loosen, after which the}- were rubbed off. The other method was to wait until the grain was read}' to be consumed, when the kernel, inclosed in its hull, was pounded. This pounded mass was then put into a vessel of water. The hulls, which would remain on the surface of the water, were then skimmed off, and the water and pounded kernels made into a very palatable soup.1
The implements for thrashing are neither varied nor numerous. Holes dug in the ground are lined with skins and slabs of wood. Wooden troughs, blankets or mats, bags of skin, and bags of woven bark are all used to hold the grain while being thrashed. Stakes am .sometimes used to steady the laborer; he usually wears moccasins while treading the grain. Cloth and mats are used as screens. Sticks used like flails and like churn-dashers are also employed. The grain is at times pounded on flat stones, and again it is shaken in large open baskets.
WINNOWING
It is not difficult to draw sharp lines separating the various processes which have been described thus far in the harvesting of wild rice. The entire winter, the spring, and most of summer intervene between the sowing and the tying. Between the tying and the gathering from several days to several weeks elapse; and though the gathering and the curing may be done on the same day, and even at the same time by different women, the gathering is on the water, while the curing is on the land. The curing and the thrashing are plainly distinct proc- esses; but it is only because of division of labor that a sharp line may be drawn between the thrashing and the winnowing. The Indian silently stalks into the labors of rice harvesting when the thrashing begins, and when it is completed he silently stalks out again, leaving the woman to lift up the pile of mixed kernels and chaff in order that the wind — nature's fanning mill — may separate them. If the wind does not blow when the grain is ready to winnow, the cleaner uses a fan.
Ellis wrote that in Green Bay county, Wisconsin, the hulls were blown off by the wind.2 The Ojibwa women of Fond du Lac reser- vation. Minnesota, and Bad River reservation, Wisconsin, all winnow their wild rice by means of the wind. ' Mr Phalon writes of Fond du Lac, "A blanket or birch bark is spread on the ground, and with the help of a good stiff breeze the grain is fanned out." The women at Lac Courte Oreille reservation, as 1 saw the process in the autumn of 1899, put a peck of the thrashed grain into a birch-bark tray
1 Paddock, letter, January 20. 1899.
'Ellis, Recollections, p. 266.
"Phalou, letter, December 27, 1898; Patterson, letter, November 13, 1898.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXXVI
WILD-RICE KERNELS BEFORE THRASHING
JENKS] WINNOWING AND STORING 1071
(plate Lxxixfr), which is about 3 feet long, 2 feet wide, and 7 or 8 inches deep. They then grasp both ends of the tray, and by a very simple yet clever movement gradually empty the chaff. The tray is lifted several inches and carried slightly outward. This upward and outward movement is checked quite suddenly, and the tray, while being drawn toward the body of the laborer, is let down again. The light chaff is thus spilled over the outer edge when the tray is at its highest point and just as it is suddenly jerked toward the laborer. However, because of the rapidity with which this shaking is done, the movements appear neither sudden nor jerky, and the chaff falls almost constantly (see plate LXXVII 5).
Among the Menomini, " on a windy day, by means of a birch-bark tray, the rice is cleaned. . . . Sometimes the rice and hulls are separated by spreading on a mat and fanning with a bark tray."1 The Sandy lake Indians in 1820 cleaned their rice with "a fan made of birch bark, shaped something like those used by farmers. This is the most expeditious way of cleaning it."8
The only implements used in winnowing are birch-bark fans, blankets and birch-bark trays (which are spread upon the ground to catch the grain).3
STORING
While the American farmer locks his granary that its contents may lie safe, the Indian hides his harvest for safety. In fact, the common term by which the Indian granary is now known throughout the North- west is the French term cache, or hiding place. It is a part of an Indian's code of morals not to steal from his friends, but it is equally ii virtue to steal from an enemy. Inasmuch as tribes ordinarily habitually steal from one another, the fall harvest of wild rice must be kept in a place of safety. Its hiding was formerly much more necessary than at present, for before the time of settled homes the families broke up the harvest camp immediately after completing their labors, and repaired to their fall festivities or hunting-grounds. As will be seen later, there was both a subjective and an objective reason why the Indians did not store away larger quantities of wild rice. One leason was that they would not gather large quantities of the grain, and the other reason was that the crop so often failed that at times they could not harvest abundantly. However, now and then the instinct of frugality was strong enough to assert itself. Atwater said that the Winnebago women contrived to save, by hiding, some of their food in time of abundance. They often buried rice and
1 Hoffman, op. cit., p. 291.
•-'Kthvard Tanner, op. cit., December 8, 1820; see also Seymour, op. cit., pp. 183,184; Kinzie, op. cit., p. 67; Jones, op. cit., pp. 2.r>9,260; Ghcen, letter, November 15, 1898. "The appearance of the grain after winnowing is shown in plate LXXVIII.
1(>7'2 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH. ANN. I'.)
maize in the ground to keep it from being stolen.1 Throughout Wis- consin in 1843 the grain was deposited in the ground to be taken out when needed for food.2
After winnowing the grain "They [the Titoha band of Dakota, in tlir early part of the eighteenth century] carry away as much of it as they think they need and store the rest in the ground. They also put some to rot in the water, and when they return in the spring they find it delicious, although it has the worst kind of an odor."5 The "Man- tantons" (Mandan) kept rice in sacks, for, after a great feast made in honor of Le Sueur, the chief "fit present a M Le Sueur d'tin esdave et d'un sac de folle avoine."*
At Sandy lake, in 1820, the rice when cured was " put into sacks of about a bushel each. A sack is valued at two skins. ... A skin is valued at two dollars."5 Carver wrote one hundred and thirty years ago that when the rice was fit for use the Dakota put it into skins of fawns and young buffalo, taken off nearly whole for this purpose, and sewed into a kind of sack, wherein they preserved it until the next animal harvest.6 The Indians at Rat Portage, Ontario, "make bags of the inside bark of cedar in which they store the rice. They hold from f to 1 bushel each."7 Schoolcraft said that the winnowed rice "is then put into coarse • inushkemoots,' a kind of bag, made of vege- table fiber or twine, with a woof of some similar material. Occasion- ally this filling material is composed of old cloth or blankets, pulled to pieces." f Birch-bark boxes were also used, which, after being fillet. were frequently buried. The Ottawa Indians used them in the middle of the seventeenth century.9 The Potawatomi also used these boxes.10 They were sewed together at the corners with "bast," the inner bark of the basswood, and were called (from the Algonquian) mococks (plate
LXX1X ")•
The Indian granaries here noticed are very simple. They consist of a hole in the ground, into which are put boxes of birch bark and I wigs made of skin, bags made of the inside bark of the cedar and sometimes of other vegetal fiber, together with twine, etc.
PROPERTY-RIGHT IN WILD RICE
As has been pointed out, most of the labors of wild rice production arc performed by women. The women of more than one family fre-
1 Atwater, Indians, p. KfJ. 'Indian Affairs Re|x>rt, 1843, p. 434. •> Neill. Memoir c>f the Sioux, p. 236. *Ln Harpe, Journal Histori<|iie,p. 66.
* Edward TanniT. Detroit Gazette, December 8,1820.
M arver. Travels, p. .V.M.
'Pither, letter, Deeember 5, 1898; see also Ulieen, letter, November 15, 1898, and Hoffman, The
MfiH'iiiini Indians, p. '.291, for the same use of •Srh.Kileraft. Indian Tribes, vol. m.p. fc!.
• Relations des Jesniles. UKt, p. 18.
i" I'n kagon, letter, November 16,1898.
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JENKS] PROPERTY-RIGHT IN WILD RICE 1073
quently unite their labors- and divide the product according to some prearranged agreement or social custom. It must not be lost sight of, however, that if the food of any worthy family fails, the entire I / food supply of the social group is available to make up the deficiency. / t/ Chief Pokagon writes of wild rice among the Pottawatomi: "Our people always divide everything when want comes to the door." 1
Among many North American Indian tribes, especially those culti- vating fields of maize, certain harvest lands are set aside by the tribe, in which the family has a sort of fee tail. In general, it may be said that such a family controls for its own use, but not for disposal in any way. definite harvest lands for stated periods of time, provided it comply with certain requirements — usually those of cultivation.
Marquette reported something similar among the Dakota in 1671. They divided the wild-rice fields so that each could gather his crop separately without trespassing upon his neighbor's rights. Wild rice "qu'ils partagent entr'eux, pour y faire la recolte chacun a part, sans empieter les uns sur lesautres."
Among the Ojibwa Indians property right is quite generally recog- nized in wild rice. It seems to be due not to tribal allotment, but to preoccupation. Certain harvest fields are habitually visited by fami- lies which eventually take up their temporary or permanent abode at or near the fields. No one disputes their ownership, unless an enemy from another tribe, in which case might establishes right. The field or crop is sometimes distinguished by a personal mark, as is shown in the following cases. Carver said that after having tied the bunches they went to gather the crop, "when each family having its feperate allotment, and being able to diftinguifh their own property by the manner of fattening the fheaves, gathers in the portion that belongs to them."5 Ellis referred to a similar custom at Green bay. He spoke of twisting the standing stalks into bunches, and says: "This gives the party twisting the bunches, a kind of pre-emption to so much of the rice, which before was all common."3 Schoolcraft. in speaking in a general way of wild rice gathering in Michigan. Wis- consin, Iowa. Minnesota, and the upper Mississippi and Missouri val- leys, said that the places where each family is to gather are generally selected and known beforehand.* Of course, if one has sowed a field, no one, unless a tribal enemy, would think of disputing the owner- ship of the sower, and such rice beds fall to the kin, as would personal property.
AMOUNTS OF WILD KICK HARVESTED
The primitive Indians do not take production very seriously. Indeed, they do not take it seriously enough for their own welfare, for often thev are in want in an unnecessarilv short time after the harvest. In
1 1'nkagon. letter. November 16, 1898. 'Ellis, Recollections, |i.i!iio.
-' ( 'arvrr, Travels, p. 523. * Schoolcruft, Indian Tribes, vol. in, p. 62 et seq.
1074 WILD BICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANN.W
tin' case of wild rice, their want was due not to overproduction and iinderdistrihution. but to underproduction.
In 1S2U Edward Tanner wrote: ''One family ordinarily makes about live sacks of rice [5 bushels]; but those who are industrious some- times make twenty-live — though this is very rare." At Pelican Lake, Wisconsin, they {rather about l^i or 15 bushels per family. They could gather more " if they did not spend so much time feasting and dancing every day and night during the time they are here for the purpose of gathering.'" In the following table (A) an attempt is made to show the state of wild rice production between the years and 1898.
1 Edward Tanner, Detroit Gazette, December 8,1820. sUotzfeldt, letter, December 3, 1898.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXXVIM
WILD-RICE KERNELS AFTER THRASHING AND WINNOWING
JENKS]
AMOUNTS HARVESTED ANNUALLY
1075
5,
g T
is
ic weight of a bushel is 60, 38, 36, •s T.'I bushels per acre. There are i the natural production of the g the harvest, in which case the 'ii did not speak of the riee crop eh follow are sometimes given in eals which were produced.] |
a |
(= I i r |
d £ i. p, ce « tf S tti (a (e is . <-*:-< <j » S c j: ^ |
ft 0. 0. C. a; cT ^ oj as » ct » ° £ J s |
a, o" X £ B X 6 « T3 a |
»? £2 0. 0. s?g ClO 30 d a. |
- 5 - « « a g g «i 'g 3 ° 1* 2 sslHllJ 1 1 1 1 ! 1 * 1 - 1 1 § 1 1 |
?s litirvestod. . . |
: oo oo |
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| f | .S S H o 5 > ~" •— ' O £4 rt - = - ~ ~ (a 3 |
• |
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fe ; ; : ci - "* e : : -2 : •2 C - ^ T: |
See note <l, p. 107 See note 6, p. 107 |
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C " = i ^. e * = o £ 5 M Z ^i':-^''^1 |
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[NOTE— Wild rice has no legal weig and 30 pounds. In some fields, as at l.ac sonic fundamental reasons why the follo\ Indians he does not know accurately the amount of wild rice gathered is cither on in their first reports. Attention is also ca the text and again in various tabulated f< |
Indians |
1 C, -, - \ c j |
Mississippi, Pillager, and \Vinncbigoshish Menomini (Green Bnv agency) Chippcwa (Ojibwa) of Lake Superior agency). Mississippi hand (Chippewa agency of Mi |
of Mississippi). Hed Lake Indians ( Chippewa agency of ^ Chippewa (Ojibwa) of Lake Superior Kickapoo (Kickapoo agency, Kansas i Chippewa (Ojibwa) of Lake Superior — Chippcwa (Ojibwa) of Saginaw Chippewa (Ojibwa) of Mississippi river . Pillager and Lake Winnebigoshish India 1)0 |
('hippewa (Ojibwa) of Mississippi river. . Do |
Seneca and others (New York) Menomini (Green Bay) Scininolc agency (Indian Territory) Yakima reservation (Washington Territo |
1076
WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES
[KTH. ANN. 19
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Indians |
Chippr\va <>f Lake Superior (Bois Fort hi |
Cliippftt-jiof Lake Superior, viz. Bad Kiv |
Ijic dn Khun bean. Lac Conrte < ireille, F and<;rand I'ortauc liands. |
chipi>e\vaof Lake superior (Michigan i. Menoinini iiireen Hay. Wisconsin) |
chippi'wa of Lake Superior i Michigan).. Chippc\va of Mississippi and other bands Heti Utke, etc. |
Mt'iiomini ((irc-on hay, Wisconsin) Crot-k> i Indian Tcrritorvl Somiin>U> ( Indian Territory) lv,th lu-nr DfinxT. Colorado) Coos . Al.v.-a s;ihii(fonry, Washington Ump<iua AlM-a sului^rm-y, Washington > v^rasnlmjftMii'y, Washin>rloni Mrnmnini, Stockbrid^i'.s, M unset-. Om-itla Cliiliprwa of Lake Superior i I,a Point e ai# |
"I ~ •f. 0 M 2 ^ |
Se-minole ( Indian Territory i Menomini, Stockbridges, Mnnsee. i inrida Chippewa of Lake Superior i La 1'ointeai,' |
;- - i 'i I |
Santee Sioux i Klandreau special agency river, norlhern Xehraska). |
Chippcwa, Bad River band ( Wisconsin 'i.. (Ojibwai White Earth (Minnesota) . Missi bma,and Ottertail Pillager bands. |
JENKS]
AMOUNTS HARVESTED ANNUALLY
1077
i 2 I |
,£. i. — |
5 = a. |
— ^ ~| > 1-1 |
II i _ bo £ 5 5 C |
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S £ r i |
d C 1 5 |
|
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nnds. intpithcrcd |
intfiathcred |
i- of wild rice sola.. of crop gathered. . . it of crop (lathered., i-c gathered much |
nt of wild rice in 1 nit the whiU-s who |
c ij ^ p |
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= _ ^ '" : 3^ >-• |
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Chippewa, Bad river . » isi Chippewa (Wisconsin), Fond dn La til-ami Portage, Red (MitT. Hud Kiver, beau, and Lac Conrtc Orcillc bands .. |
Had I'.iver reservation, Wisconsin Fond dn Lac reservation. Minnesota. Lac Coiirle llreille reservation. Wiscon |
Nclt Lake reservation, mini Buis Fort). The Indians at Bad river. Fond nearly the entire crop at Vermilion li laki-— lln-ir harvest ground— frequent |
1078 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ASS.W
JVute a — Eatitii'tt' * of »tli- .' -utftit.n* j<>r tin in <ir 186&
Commodities • |
Amounts |
Value |
$40,000 |
||
150,000 pounds |
i5,ooe |
|
3,000 btisheN |
3,000 |
|
Maize |
1,000 bushels |
1,500 |
Total |
09.500 |
|
With wild rice valued at 825,000, as is given in Table A. it equaled 30.308 per cent of the total Indian production (Indian Affairs Report. 18S4,p.417).
Xoteb—Zizaniu uiiiutlica has not been found we-t of the Rocky mountains; so this reference should be, probably, to Art n'l/atun, the indigenous wild oat of California and vicinity.
\nt: !•— Scvi-ral li'tti T- of iminiry sent to Indian Territory have met with no response. It is there- fore impossible to state what grain this is, though it is hclicted to b.> Ztitutia 'i.jtiatica.
Sole d— The Seminole of Indian territory planted riee in 1-7:: . M-I- Indian Affairs Report, 1873, p. '^'2 i. The same fact is surest eil in the Indian Affairs Report for I.STJ.
This table shows, therefore, when all doubtful references to wild-rice production are disregarded, that, besides the Indians in the wild rice district, the following have produced the grain since 1852: The Kicka- poo of Kansas; the Chippewa (Ojibwa) of Saginaw, Michigan; the Seneca and others of New York; the Santee Sioux of Nebraska, and the Peah Ute of Colorado.
It is regretted that no data could be obtained from the four reserva- tions where wild rice is now produced in greatest quantities, viz, those of Red lake. Pine point. Wild Rice river, and White Earth agencv, all in Minnesota.
Following is a list of Indian agencies at reservations where no wild rice grows, although the natives are within reach of what was once wild-rice territory, and many of them consumed the grain at an earlier period:
Lower Brul£ agency, South Dakota. Cheyenne River agency, South Dakota. Crow Creek agency, South Dakota. Pine Ridge agency, South Dakota. Yankton agency, South Dakota. Rosebud agency, South Dakota.
i agency, South Dakota. Standing Rock agency, North Dakc >ta. Devils Lake agency, North Dakota. Fort Berthold agency, North Dakota. Mackinaw agency, Michigan.
TABLE B — Value of wild rice per bushel [NOTE OF EXPLANATION— These values are obtained from Table A]
Per bushel
1864 $5.00
186<; $2. 00, 3. 00, and 4. 00
1867 $1. 00 and 2. 00
186S . . . . $2. 00 and 4. 00
Per bushel
1869 $4. 00
1870 $0. 60, 1. 20, 5. 00, 7. 00 and 10. 00
1871 .. . S4. id and 5. 00
The following table will aid in showing how long and how largely the Indians in the wild-rice district have been able to maintain thein- through natural production. Some idea may also be obtained
.IKXKS]
STANDARDS OF LIFE
1079
as to what part wild rice played in the Indian food supply by compar- ing a certain tribe of Indians in Table A with the same tribe in Table C at about the same year.
TABLE C — Standard of life of the various Indians who have produced wild rice, be'u«/ mi. estimate of the standard of subsistence obtained by Indian civilized labor, Indian natural labor, and Government assistance '
Indians |
Year |
Indian civilized labor |
Indian natural labor |
Govern- ment BLMlfll ance |
|
1 |
Creeks, Indian Territory |
1875 |
Per cent 100 |
Per cent |
Percent |
2 |
Kickapoo, Kansas |
1875 |
50 |
50 |
|
3 |
do |
1881 |
90 |
10 |
|
4 |
Peah U te , Colorado |
187ft |
65 |
35 |
|
5 |
1875 |
40 |
60 |
||
6 |
1877 |
60 |
40 |
||
7 |
Chippewa of Lake Superior |
1881 |
75 |
25 |
|
8 |
Chippewa of Mississippi, Pillager, and Lake Winni- |
1875 |
95 |
||
9 |
1875 |
50 |
50 |
||
10 |
do |
1877 |
50 |
50 |
|
11 |
1877 |
40 |
60 |
||
12 |
Chippewa of Lake Superior, including 13 to 18 |
1875 |
40 |
60 |
|
13 |
Chippewa of Lake Superior in following bands: Red Cliff |
1881 |
% 65 |
35 |
|
14 |
Bad River |
1881 |
60 |
40 |
|
15 |
Lac Court Oreille |
1881 |
10 |
90 |
|
16 |
1881 |
60 |
40 |
||
17 |
1881 |
50 |
50 |
||
18 |
Bois Fort |
1881 |
50 |
50 |
|
19 |
1875 |
35 |
15 |
50 |
|
20 |
do |
1877 |
40 |
20 |
40 |
21 |
do |
1881 |
70 |
5 |
25 |
22 |
1876 |
100 |
|||
23 |
1881 |
90 |
10 |
||
24 |
1875 |
25 |
75 |
||
25 |
1881 |
65 |
12 |
23 |
|
26 |
Chippewa of White Earth agency, Minnesota, in the following bands: Mississippi, Pembina, Ottertail^ and Pillager (See 8) |
1878 |
75 |
25 |
|
27 |
All Chippewa of Leach Lake, Red Lake, and White |
1881 |
50 |
50 |
|
1 These figures are found in the Indian Affaire Reports for 1875, p. 122 et seq. ; for 1877, p. 311 et seq. , for 1878, p. 305, and for 1881, p. 290 et seq.
CHAPTER V CONSUMPTION
NUTRITION
Of the various authors quoted in this memoir not one has spouen disparagingly of wild rice as a food. A few have observed that it is nearlv as good as the white rice of commerce; a great many have said that it is fully as good, while still many others have said that it is better. A few of these observations will be presented later, when the various ways of preparing the grain for food are considered.
In 1862 Mr Ed. Peters made a chemical test of the composition of the grain (Zi::<n>'i<t m/natica), and Prof. F. W. Woll, chemist of the Agricultural Experiment Station at Madison. Wisconsin, made a simi- lar test for this memoir in 1899. These are the only tests which have been reported, and it is upon them that the positive statements of the nutritive qualities of wild rice are made. The following table (D). column /(, shows that wild rice is more nutritious than the other native foods to which the wild rice producing Indians had access, viz, maize, green corn, corn meal, white hominy (substitute for Indian hominy). strawberries, whortleberries, cranberries, sturgeon, brook trout, and dried beef (substitute for dried or jerked buffalo meat). It shows also that it is more nutritious than any of our common cereals, as oats, barley, wheat, rye. rice, and maize.
It is noticed that the wild rice is very rich in nitrogen-free extract; that is. carbohydrates, such as starch, sugar, etc.. which are heat pro- ducers. In the economy of the animal body they are transformed into fat. They thus produce both heat and fat. Indeed, wild rice is seen to be richer in carbohydrates than any other of the foods here mentioned, with the exception of white hominy — the hominy of com- merce.
The last two specimens of wild rice mentioned in Table D were pro- duced by Indians and came from Lac Courte Oreille reservation. \Vis- con-in. while the h'rst specimen probably was not. as the Indians do not consume the grain in the "original substance." and the "dried sub- stance.'' by Peters, is drier than the Indians prepared it — the water having been entirely removed. It is also noticed that the Indian-pro- duced wild rice is very rich in crude protein, or the albuminoids,
1080
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT PL. LXXIX
-l. BIRCH-BARK MOCOCKS IN WHICH THE GRAIN IS CARRIED
«. BIRCH-BARK WINNOWING TRAY
JEXKS]
COMPOSITION OF INDIAN FOODS
1081
1
i
•te
sjo^ |
« |
i |
?! 8 ,o rt « |
rH <O O) N O Ci |
* |
2 |
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— -^ ~ i 5 ^ |
\ |
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£ £ 0§ ^H 3S |
(O GO t* C1 f~ O |
d |
— |
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c |
:- 5! S:1 |
» n |
ntirc gra |
i |
x has ha |
|||||
2 |
.£ |
vided b |
•n •^ OJ a = |
|||||||
~sis~ |
"p O JO O "•£> 2 |
7. |
8sJ-'« |
,.00,^ |
I |
T -~ |
"• |
|||
^It'3 |
r |
in IH co |
• • n ' TH' rn' |
l |
1 |
9 |
||||
tsiv.c-f. |
w r- M oo -r r^ 4 |
7 |
9 ~" ci -^ OJ -i- O t>. r- «o r-* t» |
R' * 3 $s |
0 1 5 B |
•o r. -ri |
ts pellicle, w |
|||
Jf |
1*8 ass |
88. t- |
1 |
^' |
£ |
|||||
"Ii |
4 |
"~ .r |
B |
|||||||
1^1 1 |
"^ ?? 00 t£ <£3 CN |
s |
iQ C3 ••0 O iC 00 C» |
CO O t- "*" •** CO |
d ^ |
i C o ~ |
| |
|||
w! |
4 |
r- |
•-I iH T-t |
CC 1-1 >O OS |
vorhan |
i X 0 |
.L 1 |
s d |
||
SO ifS Q Q « Oi to ® |
S |
3§ 5 in • |
71 |
e |
t |
i |
||||
rfll ' — '^}-S oj s.a b |
^ r-l oJ --1 O M ^ iM CO d |
0> 0> 0 |
:::::: d c MIMI! |
aren in dem Gewichtsverhaltniss von 8£ |
feschalt," is multiplied by 88, and the si |
I rice, it must be noticed that the wild r |
ing its pcllicH' ri'inoved it would be stil |
d £ ;: 1 'T - |
tperiment Station 1891, table 33 |
|
Cereals and Indian foods |
Wild rice: In der urspriinglichen substanz1— Haferreis geschiilt2 Samenschale 2 In der trockenen substanz1 — Haferreis geschjil t 2 Samenschale2 The original substance (the entire grain) |
The dried substance (the entire grain ) |
Smoke dried (the entire grain1! Parched (the entire grain) Coru (maize) * Green sweet corn5 Corn meal * |
White hominy6 Straw berries* Whortleberries 6 Cranberries6 Sturgeon, section of* Brook trout, whole * 1 Peters in Dietrich und Konig Futtermittel, Zweite |
- 's — ^ CD •C = ^, X i — ^ •C Z S C i x |
the grain as the Indian consumed it, the first, " Haferreis |
3 In comparing the nutrition of wild rice and cleane< |
- a 2 — "^ 1 •„ S p ^ '_ S '£ V ^: "r C a E ^ T i |
* Test of Professor F. W. Woll, Experiment Station, 1 |
5 Report of Connecticut Board of Agricultural and E • Ibid., table 32. |
WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [KTH.ANN.W
Sill 11
Ifb*
ri ..-: •» id « IN - 4
, 3
11
»o r- GO t-
o -v QO o> « el ^ r4
S S 3 S
= '
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& I
2 8.
I 3 I §,
g * A
1 s : I ^ I «
SsIJ
° •s p< *
la, = |
&s « a Ss^l
JEXK3] WILD BICE AS A FOOD 1083
which produce flesh. It is richer in flesh-producing substance than any of the other foods given above, with the exception of sturgeon and dried beef. It is therefore true that wild rice is the most nutritive single food which the Indians of North America consumed. The Indian diet of this grain, combined with maple sugar and with bison, deer, and other meats, was probably richer than that of the average American family to-day. Of course this diet lasted a limited part of the year only.
WAYS OF PREPARING WILD RICE FOR FOOD
Food suggests plenty and satisfaction. The witty and humorous after-dinner speeches of well-dined and well-wined men are a natural overflow. Radisson presents a brief glimpse of a happy primeval banquet before the western Indian had learned to distrust the white man. He speaks of a friendship feast of the Dakota as follows: "Our fongs being finifhed, we began our teeth to worke. We had there a kinde of rice, much like oats . . . and that is their food for the moft part of the winter, and [they] doe dreffe it thus: ffor each man a hand- full of that they putt in the pott, that fwells fo much that it can fuftice a man."
The Indian is very fond of soups, and wild rice is commonly used by him to thicken food of this kind quite as commercial rice is used by the whites. Early in the eighteenth century Neill wrote of the Dakota Indians: "Wild rice is a good and very healthful food, very light and nourishing; it is excellent with game broth."
On the same page this author also said that at the time, these Indians buried their store of grain in the fall of the year, " they also put some to rot in the water, and when they return in the spring they mid it delicious." Ellis wrote of the use of wild rice in the early days at Green bay, Wisconsin, as follows: "It is used to thicken their broth of venison, bear, fish, and fowl: it is very nutritious and palatable."1 The wild rice of the Mississagua Indians of Rice lake, Ontario, is parched and "without further preparation it is often used by hunters and fishermen when out on expeditions. But more frequently it is made into soup and stews.''4 From Lake of the Woods comes a i /
receipt for a wild-rice dish, which suggests a delightful flavor, as fol- / /
lows: "A soup made of wild rice and blue berries is a very palatable dish, and eagerly sought after by those who have been living on salt food for several weeks.''5 The Potawatomi Indians, after pounding their grain, hull and all. and throwing it into a vessel of water, skimmed off the refuse hulls and made the remainder into a very palatable soup.6
1 Radisson. Voyages . . . ,p.215. 4 Chamberlain, op. fit., p. 155.
- Xeill, Memoir of tin- sioux. p. iiu. 5 Hind, Narrative, pp. %-97.
» Ellis, Recollections, p. '266. "Paddock, letter, January 20, 1899.
1084 WILD KICK (S.VTHKKKKS UK ri'l'EK I.AKKS [KTH. ASN.19
Sonic of the dishes of which wild rice forms a part, however, are not so suggestive of satisfaction to tlic palate of the white man: and yet, most white people have eaten food less palatable than a >te\v or soup of wild rice and dog meat, notwithstanding its auggeativeness. It is a favorite dish with the Indian. After some of the customary conflicts between the Ojibwa and Dakota in the wild-rice district, the following was recorded in 1840: "The savage party [Ojil>wa| also cooked some of the flesh of the Sioux with their rice."' The Sandy hike Indians, according to Doty, have boiled the excrement of rabbit witli their rice to season it, and they esteem it a luxury. To make this dish still more palatable — in fact, one of their highest epicurean dishes -they occasionally took a partridge, and, after having picked off its feathers, but made no further preparation, they pounded it to the consistency of jelly. It was then thrown into the dish and the whole was boiled.2
The following dish is not only palatable, but also very nutritious: "The Indian women used to make a favorite dish of wild rice, corn, and tish boiled together, and called Tiixxinmiionii;/. I remember it to this day as an object of early love.": Marquette wrote that after winnowing the grain "they pound it to reduce it to meal, or even impounded, boil it in water seasoned with grease, and in this way. wild oats [wild rice] are almost as palatable as rice would be when not better seasoned."4 Traill wrote of the Indians about Quinto bay. Ontario, as follows: "That night . . . cooked some of the parched rice. Indian fashion, with venison, and they enjoyed the novelty very much. It made an excellent substitute for bread, of which they had been so long deprived."6
The cooked grain is eaten plain, and is also a great favorite with the Indian when eaten with sweets, especially with maple sugar. School- craft tells us that it was boiled in water to the consistency of homin v and was eaten, unseasoned, with spoons. It is also sometimes roasted and eaten dry. He stated that it contains more gelatinous matter than the southern rice, and is very nutritious." Hennepin said that the Indians used to boil their rice except during the time of hunting. "Les Sauvagcs en font leur provifion pour fubfifter line partie de I'anne'e en la faifant cuire en maniere de bouillie hors du temps de leur Chaffe."7 Flint wrote "The grain, that we have eaten, was as white, as the common rice. Puddings made of it tasted to us. like those made of sago."8 ( 'ai-ver stated that the Dakota "boil it and eat it alone"1; that they also
1 Neill, The Beginnings of Organized Society, p. 64. !Doty, Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. vn, p. 199. "Biddlc. Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. i.p. i;:i. « Shea, Discovery, p. 9. •Traill, Canadian Crusoes, p. 186. "Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. in, p. 63. 'Hennepin. Ximvelli1 Dccouvcrtf, p. 313* (fol.0*4). 8 Flint, Geography and History, vol. i, p. 85.
WILD RICE AS A FOOD 1085
out their meat and usually their maple sugar alone.1 Le Sueur spoke of two features of the feasts of the Dakota. He was invited to their wigwams, and, after their customary weeping ceremony "the chief offered him wild rice to eat, and according to their cuftom put the firft three fpoonfuls in to his [own] mouth."5 The ^Mandantons" (Dakota band) invited him to a great banquet where there were 100 men, each with his plate.3
Hennepin and his companions were captured and adopted into Dakota families; after pipe smoking, in the ceremony of adoption, the principal chief gave them wild rice, presenting it on birch-bark dishes. The women had seasoned the food with sun-dried whortle- berries. He said that they were as good as currants — "ces Barbares nous donnerent a manger de la folle avoine, dont j'ai fait mention. II nous la prefenterent dans de grands plats d'ecorce de bouleau. Les femmes Sauvages 1'avoient affaifonnec avec des bluez. Ce font des graines noires, qu'elles font fecher au Soleil pendant Tele, & qui font auffi bonnes que des raifins de Corinthe."4 He was also given wild rice with the smoked roe of fishes — " Aquipaguetin, qui m'avoit adopte, ne me donnoit qu'un pen de folle avoine cinq ou fix fois la femaine avec des oeufs de poiffons boucannez pour me nourir. Les femmes faifoient cuire tout cela dans des pots de terre.''1 Dablon said, "et la graisse melee avec la folle avoine, fait le mets le plus delicat de ce pai's.''8 This was among the Maskotin.
Hoffman wrote in 1892 that the Menomini Indians boiled their rice and ate it plain with maple sugar. It was also sometimes boiled with meat or vegetables, or a broth was made of it and was served as soup.7 Mr George Lawe wrote of these. Indians in the early forties that their rice when boiled and eaten with maple sugar is very palatable and nutritious, and serves them instead of breadstuffs.8 Reverend Chry- sostom Verwyst, a lifelong missionary among the Indians south of Lake Superior, says: "Wild rice is very palatable, and the writer and his dusk}- spiritual children prefer it to the rice of commerce, although it does not look quite so nice."'
The Indians at Lac Courte Oreille reservation, and doubtless all other wild rice producing Indians, will eat the grain cooked in any form in which they are able to procure it. During the three weeks following the harvest of 1899 I was daily, almost constantly, in their houses, wigwams, war-dance circle, and Mide' society lodge, and did not witness a meal in which wild rice was not consumed. In fact, during the eight days covered by their dances, when I saw them eat three or four times daily, wild rice, cooked in a manner similar to
' Carver, Travels, p. 202. 5 Ibid., p. 365.
"Shea, Early Voyages, p. 107. ° Relations des Jesuites, 1(171, p. 44.
•;I.a Harpe, Journal, p. 66. 'Hoffman, Menomini Indians, p. 291.
< Hennepin, Nouvelle Decouverte, p. 347. ' Iniliun AfTi iirs Urpori. 1M:;. p. l:M.
'Verwyst, Historical Sites of Chequamegon Buy, in \Visr. ,nsin Historical Collections, vol. xin, p. 4:29.
19 KTH, FT 2—01
\
1086 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPKK LAKKS [KTII.ANX.W
oatmeal. and eaten alone, was tlicir entire diet nearly every meal. At times al.-o the rice was used to thicken venison and dog ste\\.
The white people near all the reservations in Wisconsin and Min- nesota, where wild rice is produced are. as a rule, very fond of the food. As a result of many personal interrogations I believe that fullv 90 per cent of the white people who have eaten wild rice art- fond of it.
Both the Indians and the whites wash the grain three or four times before cooking. Sometimes a small quantity of soda is added to the water used in the first washing. The green wild rice will cook by simply having boiling water poured over it. The, parched wild rice needs to be cooked about half an hour, while the fire-cured or black wild rice requires nearly an hour for cooking. When it is cooked like oatmeal twice as much boiling water as rice is used. The grain cooked in this manner may be warmed over, and its flavor and whole- someness in no way impaired. In cooking it swells probably a little less than commercial rice, but a coffee-cup full, measured before cook- ing, will furnish a full meal for two Indians, or sufficient breakfast food for eight or ten persons. The grain is especially wholesome as a breakfast food served with sugar and cream; and when treated in anv way with wild game, whether as a dressing, in soups or stews, or as a side dish dressed with the juices of the game, it is at its best, and is delicious and wholesome.
John Long wrote of a babjr food in which wild rice was the most important ingredient. He said that the northern Indian women fed their little children on rice and oats, which, when cleaned from the hull, were pounded between two stones, and boiled in water with maple sugar. "This food is reckoned very nourishing, and with broth made from the flesh of animals and fish, which they are fre- quently able to procure, can not fail of supporting and strengthening the infant."1 Hunter, who was a captive among the Osage Indians from childhood until the age of 19 years, in the first quarter of the present century, says of their treatment of cholera morbus: "They resort to the steam-bath and cathartics, after which they give copiously of a gruel made of wild rice, and wild licorice tea. They also apply fomentations to the stomach."'
PERIODS OF CONSUMPTION
The subject of mealtime is still open to study. Why it is that peo- ple of one nation ha\e three meals regularly every twenty-four hours, while others have live, is a matter for sociologic speculation. As ha bits of industry become more tixed and the food supply comes more under control, mealtime correspondingly tends to become more regular.
i,'. Voyages and Travels, p. (SI. -Huiitur, Captivity Among tin- Indians. p. i:;:;
JE.NKS] WILD BICE AS A FOOD 1087
During the period when the food supply depended upon almost con- stant effort, meals were partaken of whenever the individual could obtain food.
In this section will be brought together some facts as to the time of day and year when wild rice is consumed. It is natural to expect that most of it will be eaten immediately after harvest, for the Indian does not often save in large quantities or for a long period, especially in the case of food that he relishes greatly. However, since the fall hunts begin soon after the harvest, wild rice is generally quite exten- sively saved by those Indians whose hunting grounds are fruitful.
Hunter says of the Osage Indians: "The usual times of taking their meals, are at sunrise, noon, and sunset." When the days are long and the food abundant, the grown people eat three meals daily, when the da}7s are shorter but two meals are eaten, and when food is scarce they eat but one, and sometimes not even that.1 According to School- craft the Dakota Indians have no regular mealtime.2
Pokagon, the late Potawatomi chief from the St Joseph river valley, Michigan, wrote in regard to this subject: "Indians eat when hungry." His people ate their rice in the fall and all the year if it lasted.3 The Leech Lake Indians, in 1863, garnered their wild rice for use in mid- winter, when other food could not be obtained.4 In 1843 the Menomini stored their wild rice in the ground "to be taken therefrom, and used, during the winter, as their necessities require. In times of scarcity of game, they subsist entirely upon it."5 Radisson says that wild rice is the food of the Dakota " for the moft part of the winter."6
Pike wrote of the ' ' Minowa Kantongs " (the Mde wakantonwan band of the Dakota) that they cultivated a small quantity of maize and beans, but, although he was with them in September and October, he never saw one kettle of either, as they always used wild rice for bread. This production, he said, nature has furnished to all of the most unculti- vated tribes of the Northwest, so that they may gather enough, which, together with the products of the chase and the net, will insure them subsistence throughout the entire year.7
Of the wild-rice district in 1820, we read: "A few provident Indians save a little [wild rice] for the spring of the year to eat with their sugar, though generally by the time they have done curing it, the whole is disposed of for trinkets and ornaments." The author continues: "Thus by gratifying their vanity, they are left nearly des- titute of provisions for the winter — choosing rather to endure hunger and the greatest misery, than to mortify their pride."8
1 Hunter. Captivity, pp. 259-260. 4 Indian Affairs Report, 1863.
2 Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. iv, p. 67. 6 Ibid.. 1843, p. 134. 'Pokagon, letter, November 16, 1898. 'Radisson, Voyages, p. 215. 'Cone*, I'ike. vol. i. p. 344.
- Ivl ward Tanner. Detroit Gazette, December 8, 1820; reprinted in Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. vn, p. 199 et seq.
1088 WILD KICK GATHKKKKS OF ri'I'KR LAKES IETH.ANN.19
Will-roil says thsit in lst;-J the Ojibwa of Leech lake, Minnesota, gathered sulhYient wild rice for winter consumption.1 Carver wrote that the Indians saved the grain for an entire year. He speaks of the sacks of fawn skins and young bison skins "wherein they preserve it till the return of their harvest." : In 1775 Alexander Henry wrote of obtaining wild rice from the Indians in Canada, immediately north of the wild-rice district in the United States, about ten months after their last harvest.3
Letters of inquiry sent to reservations on which Indians now use wild rice elicited no new facts as to the time of its consumption. The grain is very highly esteemed as a food, and is usually eaten at any and all meals until the supply is exhausted.
'Warren, History of the Ojifoways, p. 186.
s Carver, Travels, p. 524.
"Heiiry, Travels, pp. 241,243,244,251.
CHAPTER VI
GENERAL SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC INTERPRETATIONS THE WILD-RICE MOON
With primitive man, as with wild animals, there are two chief foci from which radiate the primary activities of the individual and his society. Both are connected with the processes of growth. The one is food getting, the other reproduction. Along these radiations the majority of life's battles are fought— along those from the first focus the individual struggles to survive; along those from the second he struggles that others may survive, that he may perpetuate his species. In the evolution of animal life these struggles may be classified roughly as, first, purely chemical; next, predominantly instinctive, and last, conscious. Attention is called to the struggle along the radiations from the food focus, and in this last, or conscious stage.
The most fundamental and persistent want of man is that for food. It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that periods of food plenty should be recognized and marked conspicuously by suitable names. It is a worldwide custom of primitive people to name many months or moons of the year after that natural product which, by its abundance or useful- ness, or by other means, emphasizes itself for the time being above all other products. Wild rice at the time of its harvest is such a product, and it has given name to its harvest moon among many wild rice produc- ing Indians. In the Ojibwa language the September moon is called . , ManominiJce-gisiss or Manomini-gisiss, "the moon of the gathering / / of wild rice."1 Schoolcraft gives the synonym Mon-o-min-e-gees-is, or ' ^ " moon of wild rice,"2 as referring to the August moon. There need be no discrepancy here, for the harvest occupied parts of August, September, and October. Wilson gives muhnoomene-keezis, "the wild rice moon," as another synonym for September.8 In the Ottawa language, Menomonie-ka-we Jcee-zis, and in the Menomini language, J'l'liia-lcun ka-zho, both mean "wild-rice-gathering moon." * The Pota- watomi Indians have a moon called manominike-gises,®? "the moon of gathering wild rice,"5 corresponding with late September and early
' Baraga, Dictionary. 2 Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. v. p. 569.
•'Wilson, Manual of the Ojebway Language. Both Wilson and Baraga call August the bilberry or whortleberry moon. 'Tanner, Narrative, p. 321. 'Pokagon, letter, November 16, 1S9S.
1089
1090 WIM) RICK (JATHKKKKS OF UPPER LAKKS [ETH.AXX.W
October. All of these1 synonyms, except that in tin* Menomini language, are clearly from the same root terms, viz. ni<iii<>' min. wild rice, and keezis or i/i*!™, moon or month.
In the language of the Dakota Indians, two moons, roughly corre- sponding to our September and October, have received their names from wild rice. September is called Psin-ini-k.-tn-ir,,. or "the ripe- rice moon," and October is designated Wa-&u-pee-wee, or Wee-wa-zu- pee, "the moon when wild rice is gathered and laid up for winter."1 Neill2 gives the following synonyms for the same months: September is PsinhnaJcetu-wi, or "the moon when rice is laid up to dry," and October is Wi-tnijupi, or Wasupi-wl, "the drying-rice moon." As early as 1828 Beltrami3 cited the names for these two months. One of the words given by him is clearly a synonym of the above and the other is apparently so. As this author is an Italian it is easy to see that the difference may be due largely to spelling. However, he con- fused the words and called September Wasipt-om, "the moon of oats," and October Sciwo8tap\-ou\, "the second moon of oats." Long gives Wajopi we or "commencement of wild rice" as the name for Sep- tember; and Siushtaupl we or "end of wild rice" as the name for October.* WtMX&Huhoo is also given as meaning "the moon when the wild rice is ripe."5
I Thus, with the three great branches of the Algonjquian stock in the
I district of the upper lakes — the Ojibwa, Ottawa, and Potawatomi — the
' autumnal harvest of wild rice was so important an event that at least
one month was named from it. This is true also of the smaller tribe
of the same stock, the Menomini, while the Dakota, of the Siouan
stock, were so influenced in their household economy by this grain
that two of their autumn months bear its name.
WILD RICE IN INDIAN CEREMONY AND MYTHOLOGY
The mytholog}' of primitive people is usually an attempted explana- tion of phenomena, and for the purposes of comparison much credit may be attached to it. The following facts have been collected which show at what relative periods some of the Indians came into possession of wild rice. The first totem of the Menomini Indians was the Bear: consequently Bear is the name of the chief phratry. This bear came from the earth at Minikanisepe (Menomini river) between the upper peninsula of Michigan and Wisconsin, where the Bear phratry long resided. The second totem was the Eagle, which was at the head of the Big Thunder phratry, dwelling at Lake Winnebago. The Good Mystery made this phratry the laborers; they also brought rain.
'Gordon, Winonn, p. 134, note. :l Bcltrnmi, Sources of tlir Mi*>-i*sippi, ii, p. 'J74.
"Neill, History of Minnesota, p. t*;. 'Loinr, Narrative, vol. i, p. K2.
•Alwiitrr. Indians, p. 17(1. This author says that the " Davotas reckon time by lunations," Init liu mentions only seven month*.
IK*KS1 SPIRITUAL OBSERVANCES 1091
The Good Mystery gave them maize, and they were also the makers of fire. They visited the Bear phratry, offering maize and fire in exchange for wild riee, which was the property of the Bear and the Sturgeon, and which grew abundantly along Menomini river. The bargain was concluded, ami since that time the Bear and the Big Thunder phratries have lived together.1 The Potawatomi of St Joseph river, Michigan, have a similar tradition. The Bear phratry gave maize and fire in exchange for wild rice.2 The Winnebago sav that the "Great Spirit'1 gave maize and wild rice to one man at the same time.3 From the above, and from other facts known about these Indians, it seems plain that the Menomini came into possession of wild rice relatively early — that is, before the complete organization of the tribe — while the Potawatomi and the Winnebago obtained it at a much later time.
The periods of the wild-rice harvest, as indeed of most opportuni- ties for social gatherings, are gala days to the Indians. Social pas- times and religious ceremonies are strangely commingled. Some of the ways in which the Indians express themselves at the rice harvest are here given, and others are presented which wild rice seems to characterize more or less distinctly. The Indians of White Earth reservation, Minnesota, give a rice feast. "The Manomin (wild rice) feast comes in the fall after gathering rice and before the winter hunt. It is a sort of thanksgiving, and prayers are offered to Manitou."* The Ojibwa Indians in Canada, about Lake of the Woods, perform the following ceremony: "Before commencing to gather the rice they make a feast, and none are allowed to gather the grain till after it. They thank the Master of Life for the crop, asking him to keep off all storms while they are harvesting."5 The first fruits gathered by the Dakota "are set apart for the purpose of a spiritual or holy feast; the first corn or wild rice of the season, the first duck or goose killed when they appear in the spring, are all reserved for the feast, at which those Indians only who are entitled to wear the badge of f having slain an enemy, are invited."6 Tanner, who spent all his life ' with the Ojibwa, continually speaks of such feasts. At the sacred dog feast on the White Earth reservation the Ojibwa Indians usually kill and stew a dog in rice; certain ceremonies, including a dance, are then performed, after which the dog is eaten.7 Mr Long wrote of the "Poes" (Potawatomi) that they compelled their prisoner, Mr Ramsey, of the American Fur Company, to eat his death feast at the war kettle
' Hoffman, The Menomini Indians, Fourteenth Annual Report of tlie Bureau of Ethnology, part 1, p. 41).
'- I'okafron, letter, November 16,1898.
3 Information from the Winnebago near Elroy, Wiseonsin, winter of 1898-99.
« Eleventh Census of the United States; Indians, p. 340.
'•> I'ither, letter, November is, 1898.
'• Lock wood, Early Times and Events in Witconain, appendix 6, pp. us-1%, in Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. n. |>. 1M.
" Eleventh Census of the United states: Indians, p. 346.
WILD RIC'E OATHERKKS OF 1'IM'EK LAKES [ETH.ANN.W
before he was to he tortured. The feast ••consisted of dog. tyger-cat, and bear's grease, mixed with wild oats [wild rice]."1
Carver gives an account of a unique rice feast among the "Naudo- wessies" (Dakota). They paid uncommon respect to one of their women, and "They told me that when fhe was a young woman, for at the time I faw her fhe was far advanced 'in life, fhe had given what they termed a rice feaft. According to an ancient but almoft obfolete cuftoni . . . fhe invited forty of the principal warriors to her tent, where having feafted them on rice and venifon, fhe by turns regaled each of them with a private defert, behind a ferene fixed for this pur- pofe in the inner part of the tent." . . . " So fenfible were the young Indians of her extraordinary merit, that they vied with each other for her hand, and in a very fhort time one of the principal chiefs took her to wife." . . . "It is however fcarccly once in an age that any of their females are hardy enough to make this feaft, notwithftanding a huf- band of the tirft rank awaits as a fure reward the fucceffful giver of it: and the cuftoni, I fince find, is peculiar to the Naudoweffies.'" The rice was used probably because it was the greatest delicacy which could be set before guests. Yet it seems to have been the kind of food which always characterized this extraordinary social function.
As might be expected from the meaning of their name, the Menomini Indians are more deeply influenced by wild rice than are other wild rice producing Indians. Special investigation3 has proved, according to Indian traditions, what the facts recently given from Dr Hoffman's report seemed clearlv to show, i. e., that the Menomini came into pos- session of Wild rice at the very inception of their tribal organization. Mft'n&bush, one of the numerous mythic half-god half -man personages of the myths of the Menomini Indians, created the bear, which came out of the eai'th at Menominee river (between the upper peninsula of Michigan and Wisconsin). Ma'nabush determined to make an Indian of the bear, and accomplished the feat at the end of four days. He called the Indian "Shekatcheke'nan," and made him the head of the Bear phratry, the first phratry of the Menomini tribe. Then taking the Indian to the river he showed it to him and gave it into his hands, with all its fish, its great beds of wild rice, and many sugar trees along its banks. He said, "I give these things to you, and you shall always have them — the river, the fish, the wild rice, and the sugar trees." Shekatcheke'nau answered, "I thank you. It is all right. I will always work for you."
In a short time Wishki'no, the eagle, the thunderer, came from lake Winnebago to visit at Menominee river. He became the head
' Long, Voyages and Travels . . . p. 146.
'Carver, Travels, pp. 245, 24fi. This paragraph, and other matter from this author, is given purely on Carver's authority; he i> nut so reliable on Indian subjects as could be desired, and this account of the rice frit*;! sivnr* strongly of the fabulous.
"Information from Menomini, lit Menomini reservation, in the autumn of isif.t.
JENKS] WILD-KICK TALES 1093
of the Big Thunder phratry, the second phratry of the Monomini tribe. The world mission of this eagle, whom Ma'nftbuah had also changed into an Indian, was to bring rain, and fire, and maize to men. When Shekateheke'nau saw the eagle, he said, '' I am glad to receive you. You will always stand by me. You will always be my warrior. You see everything — the river with fish, the beds of wild rice, everything — I turn all of these over to you." When the wild rice was ripe in the fall, the eagles, all decorated with feathers, had their canoes and rice sticks ready. After they had gathered four canoe loads, a thunderstorm came. It destroyed all of the grain which had not been gathered, and spoiled the beautiful feathers on the heads of the eagles. Then Wishki'no said to Shekateheke'nau, " It won't do for you to give me the wild rice, for wherever I go there is thunder, and wind, and rain. I will give it all back to you, and you'd better control it always." So after that when rice harvest came Shekateheke'nau called all of his people together, and they made a feast, and smoked, and asked the Great Spirit to give them fair weather during the harvest. Since then there has always been a fine, stormless harvest season.
It is remembered that Ma'nabush told Shekateheke'nau that he would always have wild rice. This fact has so influenced the Meno- mini Indians that they will not sow the grain. If the Great Spirit wants them to have it, it will grow of itself. According to their tra- ditions, when the tribe moved from Menominee river to Lake Winne- bago and vicinity, no wild rice grew there, but it soon came to supply their wants ; Lake Poygan even being named by them. It is called ' ' Po- wa-he'-canne " or "threshing [or] striking [wild rice]." Mr Gauthier, who was government interpreter for over forty years among the Menomini, said, in 1899, that the Indian agent who removed the tribe in 1852 from the vicinity of Lake Winnebago to their present reserva- tion, desired them to gather wild rice and sow it in their new homo. At each council he sought to induce them, but they unanimously refused. Nio'pet, the very intelligent chief of the tribe, says that when they came to their present home, wild rice grew only in scatter- ing stalks in Shawano lake. In about ten years it was plentiful, and has been their annual harvest field since. He also says that it has nearly died out in the vicinity of Lake Winnebago, where previously thev gathered it in great quantities. Then the old chief asked ''Why?" and smiled satisfiedly as though he knew.
Among the Ojibwa of Wisconsin wild rice is frequently spoken of in folktales. Generally it does not characterize these stories, but is mentioned as any other natural product might be. However, two tales were found among the Wenibojo' stories at Lac Courte Oreille reservation which explain the discovery of wild rice. Wenibojo', the mythic personage of the Ojibwa Indians (the same as Ma'nabush
lO'.M WII.I) KICK (JATHKKKRS OK t'l'l'KK LAKKS [KTii.ANN.19
Qif ttii- Monomini). made his homo with his grandmother. Noko'mis. One day the old woman told him that he ought to prove himself a manly fellow: he ought to take a long journey through unknown forests; he ought to go without food and got accustomod to the hard- ships of life. So Wejjibojo' told her that he was going away, that he was going to fast; and taking his liow and arrows lie wandered out into the forest. Many days he wandered, and finally camo to a beauti- ful lake full of wild rice, the first ever seen. But he did not know that the grain was good to eat; he liked it for its beauty. He went into the forest and got the bark from a large pine tree. From this bark he made a canoe with which to gather the grain. After the canoe was made, he went to Noko'mis, and they both came and gathered the rice, and sowed it in another lake. He then left Noko'mis by this lake of sowed wild rice, and, taking his bow and arrows, started away again into the forest. As he wandered along some little hushes spoke to him
1 and said: "Sometimes they eat us." Wenibojo' at first paid no atten- tion to the address, but finally he said: "Who are you talking to'"' On being told that he was the one addressed, he stooped down and dug up the plant. He found a long root, as long as an arrow. It tasted very good to him, so he dug and ate a great many of the roots. He ate so many that he became sick, and lay there three days too ill to move. When finally he got up, he wandered on. He became very faint and hungry; other plants spoke to him, but he was afraid to eat them. At last he was passing along the river, and saw little bunches of straw growing up in the water. They spoke to him and said: "Wenibojo',
I sometimes they eat us." So he picked some of it and ate it, and said: "Oh, but you are good! What do they call you?" "They call us mano'min [wild rice]," the grass answered. Wenibojo' waded out into the water up to his breast and beat off the grain, and ate and ate. but this time he was not sick. Finally he remembered the wild rice which he and old Noko'mis had sown, so he returned home to his
^juano'mln lake.
The other tale of the origin of wild rice is taken from a series of experiences of Wenibojo'. One evening he returned from hunting, but he had no game. As he came toward his fire he saw a duck sit- ting on the edge of his kettle of boiling water. After the duck flew away Wenibojo' looked into the kettle and found wild rice, floating upon the water, but he did not know what it was. He ate his supper from the kettle, and it was the best soup that he had over tasted. So he followed in the direction which the duck had taken, and came to a lake full of mano'mln. He saw all kinds of duck, and geese, and mud hens, and all other water birds eating the grain. After that, when Wenibojo' did not kill a deer, he knew where to find food to eat.
It is a common belief on the Lac Courte Oreille reservation that the Ojibwa Indians first found wild rice on the Red river of the North,
INDIAN DEPENDENCE ON WILD RICE 1095
as far west, they say, as the Ojibwa ever dwelt. This was about six generations ago. As Warren said that they estimate a generation at forty years, it would be about 1660. Sixteen hundred and sixty is probably near the time the Ojibwa came into possession of wild rice as a food, for Warren has said that they left La Pointe island in Lake Superior and came south and west onto the mainland between 1612 and 1671. On the Red river of the North the Indians used the grain and found it good. They gathered and sowed some at Snake river, Min- nesota. Then they sowed it at Shell lake, and so on to the east in Wis- consin. It was distributed eastward from one Indian to another until today it is found wherever the Ojibwa lives.
DEPENDENCE OF THE INDIAN ON WILD RICE
The food of primitive men varies with the season of the year and the section of the country in which they are. They frequently live upon one staple at a time. In the region of the upper lakes three or four weeks in March, April, or May were given to the making of maple sugar, during which time the people often lived almost exclu- sively on this food. Indeed, Alexander Henry says of maple sugar Snaking between April 24 and May 12, 1768, "We ate nothing but our sugar during the whole period. Each man consumed a pound a day, desired no other food, and was visibly nourished by it."1 Soon the early berries were ripe, then green corn (maize) was edible, if the Indian cultivated it, and in September the wild rice came. Both in the spring and autumn wild fowl were countless in the vicinity of rice fields, and furred game and h'sh were plentiful all the year. The win- ter was the season for hunting, when stores of pemmican 2 were laid up. v/
In some sections of the country the rice crop failed partly or wholly at frequent intervals. Information from such sources as Chief Poka- gon and government farmers at Indian reservations shows that it so fails once in three or four years.3 Again, at Grass lake, Lake county. Illinois, where there are 1,000 acres of wild rice, it has not been known to fail in the last sixty years.
These preliminary remarks have been thought necessary in order that the historical sketch and summaries which follow may not over- emphasize the value of wild rice in the household economy of the Indians and early whites, for of course other foods must here be largely ignored.
Very positive evidence of the value of wild rice to the Indian comes to us from various Indian agencies. Mr D. P. Bushnell's report for
' Henry, Travels and Adventures, p. 'J1H. .
"- I'emmiean is lean buffalo meat dried and pounded fine, then mixed with melted fat and packed /
in buffalo skins. It hardens and will keep for years, but if expired to moisture it soon become^ I/ musty and unlit for use. One buffalo would make a sack of about 100 pounds. It is a very palatable, nourishing, and healthful food (Harmon).
a See page ICUy et seq.
10% WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANS.W
l>:!8 contains the -following concerning the Ojibwu of Lake Superior anil the Mississippi river:
It is highly desirable that the annuity hereafter to be paiil to the ("hippewas should be paiil between the 1st of June and last of August. [Some of these Indians had to make a total journey of 400 miles to get their annuity.] Their spring hunts are not finished before the former period, and they commence about the 1st of September to gather the wild rice, which is a great article of food with the interior Indians. As soon as they have finished gathering the rice, the fall hunt commences. If called together after the 1st of September, they will generally be more injured than benefited by the sum they receive.1
Mr Alfred Brunson, Indian Agent. La Pointe, Wisconsin, wrote Governor Doty, under date of January 6, 1843, as follows: "By the Chippeway treaty of 1837 these Indians are to receive $35,000 annually for twenty years, and by the treaty of 1842 they are to receive an additional annuity of $31,700 for twenty-five years, or a total annuity of $66,700." "The annual products of these lands [between the Mississippi river and Lake Superior] are worth much more to the Indians than they are to receive .... The annual value of the furs are estimated at $25,000. There are about 1,000 families," who make $30,000 worth of sugar. "The same number of families average 25 bushels of rice at $1, [which] is $25,000." Canoe material he figures at $10,000, and game and fish at $100,000, or a total natural produc- tion of $190,000.* Subtracting the value of the canoe material and furs, we find that the value of the wild rice was about one-sixth of that of the total remaining (edible) production.
The following protest, signed by " Martin, head chief of the Ottawa," representing Ottawa Lake, Chippewa River, and Lac Chetac bands, accompanied Branson's letter (the conditions of the treat}' of 1842 were not understood by the chiefs when they signed it): "We have no objection to the white man's working the mines & the timber & making farms. But we reserve the birch bark & cedar, for canoes, the Rice & Sugar trees & the privilege of hunting without being disturbed by the whites."8
Again, in 1843, Mr Brunson wrote to Governor Doty, under date of .January 10: "But what is of more importance to the Indians than anything else, in reference to their payment, in the time & place of it" (the italicized words are underscored in the letter). " But selecting this place [La Pointe] to pay the Inds. of the Mississippi, is next to rendering their pajrment a nullity: because they loose more by it than their pay- ments are worth to them. If taken away from their Rice harvests they loose more than the whole payment amounts to, say about $7 per head. And if taken away from their fall hunts, itamounts to the same thing." "If the payment of all the Chippewas mwt [underscored in letter] be
i Indian Affairs Report, 1838, document 20.
-' Brnnson, manuscript letter book, p. 25, in Wisconsin Historical Society's manuscript collection.
3 Ibid., p. 47.
JEXKS1 INDIAN NEED OF WILD-RICE FIELDS 1097
at the Pointe . . . [they should he] paid not later than the first of July [in which case] they can reach their rice fields in time to harvest." ' One of the chief things the Indians desired in being located on reservations was the presence of rice fields, us is seen in the following cases. The first is a "Petition of the head chiefs of the Chippewa tribe of Indians on Lake Superior," February 7, 1849, as follows:
That our people, to-\vit, sixteen hands, desire a donation of twenty-four sections of land, covering the graves of our fathers, our sugar orchards, and our rice lakes and rivers, at seven different places now occupied by us as villages, vi/: At View Desert, or Old Garden, three sections; at Trout Lake, four sections; at Lake Cotertl, four sections; at La Pointe, four-sections; at Ontonagon, three sections; at La Alice, three sections; and at Pah-po-goh-mony, three sections. That we desire these lands for the purposes specified. 2
In 1858 the agent at Fond'du Lac (Lake Superior) wrote:
The Indians at this place are disappointed and sore with regard to the boundary lines of their reserve [made according to treaty of September 30, 1854]. They state that the "Rice lakes" [Perch lake and others of its vicinity] which were to be included in their reservation have been entirely overlooked and left out, and they are unwilling to relinquish their claim to them. These lakes lie a few miles south of the present reserve, and abound in fish and wild rice, which constitute the principal subsistence of these Indians, and their attachment to them is very strong. . . . They wished me to say to their Great Father that they are willing to give up a large portion of the land contained in the present reserve if he will attach to the remainder the coveted lakes.3
The agent for these Indians reported, November 29, 1860, that the reservation should have included "Perch lake" which was the onlv section of the country where they could support themselves the year round. There they obtained an abundance of "field-rice and fish," sugar, and game. There also was their chief settlement. After the boundary was made to include this lake, he said:
It was gratifying to us to witness the pleasure with which the Indians received the intelligence that their farms and rice fields had at last been secured to them, and that they might now go on and cultivate their lands and garner their rice without the fear of being molested or driven away by the white man.
In 1863 Hole-in-the-day (Ojibwa chief) spoke for his people at St Paul, June 7, as follows (they had been moved from Wisconsin to Minnesota, and he asked that they might be removed to a new reser- vation): " Say that strip of land lying on the Wild Rice river between 47° and 48° north latitude, and east of the Red river. There is every advantage of good soil, game, fish, rice, sugar, cranberries, and a healthy climate." He asked for a land that will " combine all the ele- ments of comfort and content to our people; that is, good land, game, fish, rice, sugar. Here we have neither, to any considerable extent.
'Brunson, manuscript letter book, p. 50. in Wisconsin Historical Society's mimuspript collection. These last facts Mr Brunson also wrote under date of July 20, 1843, to Robert Stuart, Acting Superin- tendent Indian Alfuirsut Detroit; see manuscript letter liook, p. 104.
-'House Misc. Doc. 36, Thirtieth Congress, second session.
'Indian Affairs Report, 1858, p 48.
\V1U> KICK CATHKKKKS OK 1'1'I'KK LAKKS |F.T». ANN. 19
True, we mav find a little rice :ind a few tish, but not sufficient for my people, not enough to save them from starvation.'''
In 1865 the agent speaks of the impracticability of moving the Mis- sissipj)i and Mille Lacs hands of Chippewa to the Ked lake country. After speaking of the scarcity of good land and sugar trees, he con- tinued: "There is anotlier great item which must not be overlooked: that is. then- are no riee fields in that countiy, ... or fishing lakes."
A letter from La Pointe agency, Ashlaiid, Wisconsin, September 10, 1891, is as follows:
In many of the streams and lakes of these reservations wild rice grows luxuriantly. This important cereal is carefully harvested by the Indians, and constitutes an important part of their subsistence stores. It is palatable and nutritious, and by many white people is preferred to the white rice of commerce. The rice fields are the resort of numerous wild fowl, which are captured l>y the Indians and either con- sumed at home or sold in the neighboring towns. The revenue thus derived from the rice fields renders them a very important part of the Indian domain.3
This recent testimony of the value of wild fowl to the Indian sug- gests their much greater utility in past years; and such in fact the following citations prove. When it is remembered that wild fowl are to day relatively scarce, that through the Central States the sight of any considerable number of wild pigeons is rare, even to one skilled in woodcraft, but that our fathers yet living saw them in such flocks that thej* shut out the light of the sun, a better perspective will be obtained for judging of the number and value of wild fowl when the Indian and his natural foods were undisturbed by the white man. We read of the Indians of White Earth reservation in 1890, that from August to December they hunt duck, which are found in countless numbers around all the wild-rice lakes.4 Near the middle of the century wild fowl, as geese, duck, teal, etc., were reported in vast quantities, feed- ing on wild rice along Green bay,5 Minnesota river,6 Winnipeg river,7 and Lake Winnebago8 and vicinity.
Carver.9 in 1766, '67. 'tis, says the "geefe, ducks, and teal .... which refort to it [Lake Winnebago, Wisconsin] in great numbers, are remarkably good and extremely fat, and are much better flavored than thofe that are found near the fea, as they acquire their exceffive fatnefs by feeding on the wild rice."
Mnilian Affairs Hrp.irt. ' -,-.|.
'Ibld.,lxi;.->. ],. HI;.
'Infliiui Affilirs Krporl. 1-c.H.p. 171.
•KK'Vi-mli <vn-n- MI" the rnitcd Slate-: Indian-, lv.«>. BM al-o QflUMi and Koratfr Plants of the Ilakotiis, by Tin.*. A. William.-., p. 17.
>Biddli-. KiTiillrctiim-oi i.ivni hay in 1SUM7. in Wisconsin Historical Colk-oiions, vi.l. i, p. («.
•Featherstonhaugh, Canoe Voyage, pp. ;«l, st">.
nicnry Yonlc Hind, Narrative, pp. 11".. 111'..
• Atuat<-r, IntliiiM* nf OH- Xnrthwt'sl, ]i. 1X1; MT nl~(. Lifr of GtMirui' Ci.pway, p. iniiiifiiM- Hocks of iluck I'crdiiiL1 nn tin1 wiM ri( ach fall in Rice Lake, Ontario. Canaila; also Kllis,
Hi 'Col It -clil.lls. ciilH'CMlill^ Wilil foW] ill \\'i-n.I|vin rirr licliK
?er, Travel*, pp. 87-88; * t also P.'CJ.
JE.NKS] FAILURES OF CROP 1099
Hemiepin,1 in 1697, .speaks of flocks of duck, swan, and teal which devour tho rice at Mille Lacs: "Les t'enimes [Ojibwa Indians] on lient plufieurs tiges [of wild rice] enfemble avec des ecorces do bois blanc, pour euipecher que la multitude des Canars. des C'ignes, & des Sar- celles, qui s'y trouvent ordinairement, ne la mangent toute."
Dablon speaks of clouds of swans, bustards, and ducks which he saw in Green bay in 1670. The Indians caught them in nets, often taking fifty in one night.2
It is unnecessary either to emphasize the value of these fowl as food to the Indian or to call attention to the fact that the fowl were plen- tiful largely because the wild rice offered them such abundant, whole- some food, but the following point might be overlooked. These fowl were really gleaners, and picked up and preserved in most delicious form the grain which otherwise the Indian would have lost entirely. Heavy waterfowl could not do very great damage to the standing plant, and while the grain was standing the Indian must gather his harvest. When the kernels shelled out into the water they were loss to the Indian, but gain to the fowl, which picked them up by diving to the bottom. It is interesting and instructive to note that of the illustra- tions cited in the chapter on production, all except the last two — from the Chicago Tribune, October 6, 1898, and Bressany — show the Indian as busied in capturing wild fowl while the Indian woman gathers the grain.
Further evidence of the value of wild rice to the Indian, and of his dependence on it, is found in the following negative testimony. In all of these cases the Indian, for one reason or another, is unable to get his accustomed su-pply. In some sections of the country the rice crop fails partially or wholly as often as once in three or four years,3 while in other sections it has not been known to fail for long periods of time.4 The reason for this difference is doubtless found in the nature of the most frequent cause of failure, viz, drowning by high water.6
' Henuepin, Xouvelle DC'Couverte, p. 313* (fol. 0*4). delations de J<!suites, Dablon, 1670, p. 96.
3 Chief Simon Pokagon of the Potawatomi, St. Joseph county, Michigan, says " once in four years" < 'idler, Nov. 16, 1898). N. D. Rodman, Government farmer in charge of Lac Courte Oreille reserva- tion, Wisconsin, says "once in three years" (letter, Nov. 11, 1898). Stephen Gheen, Government farmer, Vermilion Luke i Xett Lake) reservation, Minnesota, says crops fail " wholly about every three years" (letter, November 15,1898).
4 Peter Phalon, Government farmer, Fond du Lac reservation, Minnesota, says, " complete failure of crop never occurs. Crop some seasons is so small it would not pay to gather, there being barely enough for seed . . . After such failures it takes two years to grow a full crop . . . Every alternate year a full crop may be expected, provided no floods occur . . . After a heavy crop one year must elapse before the old straw, necessarily remaining in the beds, decays, thus making room for a full new crop" (letter, December Ti, 1898). Roger Patterson. Government farmer. Had River reservation. Wi-consin. says " the crop never totally fails, but small crop occurs about once in three years" (letter, November 28, 1898).
•Henry Yoiile Hind. Narrative, p. 119; Indian Affairs Report, 1867, pp. 341, 342; ibid. ,1870, p. 309; ibid.. ISTI, p. .V.I7 et sc'i .: ibid.. 1x80, p. 17.); K. .1. X. Pither. letter from Rat Portage, Ontario, Canada. Mr Pither was twenty-live years Indian agent, and the -\\\\v length of time Hudson Bay Company's trader: X. D. Rodman, op. Hi.: Stephen Gheen.op. eit.: Peter Phalon.op. cit.: Roger Patter-on, op eit.; McKemicy.Toiir of the Lakes, p. :):>7.
11(10 WILD KICK (1ATHKKKKS OF ri'l'KK I.AKrS [KTII. ANN. 19
Where high water is never or seldom ])ossi)>le. failures must he le» frequent. Frosts also destroy the young plant :' while, when the grain is ripe, a storm of a few hours will thresh out into the bottom of the lake or river an entire crop;'' or. if the storm occurs while the stalk is green and tender, it will he bout over into the water, from \\hich it can not rise again/1
Sir John Richardson wrote that in 1847 multitudes of caterpillars spread like locusts over the neighborhood of Rainy river. "They de-t roved the FoU<- in-ni/u- [wild riee] on Rainy lake,'' though they did not touch wheat.' A letter dated "American Fur Company's establishment. Fond du Lac" (Lake Superior). August 8. l^i'ti. speaks of a freshet the previous spring. It " destroyed the wild rice — and this makes our visit with the supplies we have brought with us >0 opportune . . . We are here at a moment of the utmost need of the poor Indians."
In 1849 the rice crop of the Pillagers (Ojibwa of Leech lake, Minne- sota, numbering about 1,050) entirely failed, and on this article they depended mostly for their winter's support. "Hunger and starvation menace them; and in order to procure means of subsistence their hun- ters this winter will be forced to press westward till they find the buf- falo."6 The Ojibwa of Sandy lake, Minnesota, numbering about :jnn, lost their rice both in 1S4'.» and in 1850. The majority of them passed their winters in the vicinity of Crow Wing and Fort Gaines, Minne- sota, on ceded lands, hunting and begging for a living.7 The " Su<_:- wun-dug-ah-win-in-e-wug" (Ojibwa in Minnesota north of Lake Supe- rior) also lost their rice crop in 1850. "and this people anticipate with aching hearts the sufferings and privations of the approaching winter."8 These Indians also depended much upon rabbit and reindeer for winter consumption.
Mr Hind, in passing down the Rainy lake waterway in 1857. said that the Indians he met lamented the failure of the rice that \ car. and this failure, together with poor fishing and extraordinary mortality among the rabbits, threatened them with famine during the coming winter." September HO, 1807, the agent of the Ojibwa of the Missis- sippi (Minnesota), wrote that the rice crop appeared likely to be almost an entire failure. "This is a great calamity to the Indians, as they depend largely upon it for subsistence, and I fear suffering will ensue in consequence."1" The Ojibwa of Lake Superior (Wisconsin) lost their crop both in 1869 and 1870 and are ••compelled to scatter over
'Chief I'likiiK'Hi. cip. cit.
- I)r Morse. Report, iippendix. p. "vj.
8ROK*T I'lltlersoll. op. cit.
4 Henry Yonle Hind. Siirrutivc. p. Itt. Kor further ennxes of failure, see chapter on botany, section '• Ntiturul Knemies."
•MeKenncy.Tonr of the I.itkcs. p. :«7. Mind., p. 59.
'Indian AtTnirs Report. 1.-OO, p..'i7. "Henry Yonle Hind. Narrative, pp !1S, 119.
'Ibid. .p. V,. '"Iiidiuii Affairs Report, ISI;T. pp. :;n. :;u.
FOOD OF EARLY WHITES 1101
the country and seek such subsistence as accident may offer them."1 Of the Bad River Indians (Ojibwa of Wisconsin) in Isso. we read: "The rice crop will be. a failure, and the Indians depend upon this for winter use and also for means of obtaining such articles as they need and are not furnished by the Department."8
Comment is unnecessaiy in the face of such testimony. All shows that the failure of the crop was so infrequent that the Ojibwa Indians depended upon wild rice for their winter subsistence, and that its loss could not be made up by any other resource of natural production.
DEPENDENCE OF THE WHITE MAN ON WILD RICK
Carver wrote, in 1766, in regard to the use of wild rice by the whites:
In future periods it will be of great fervice to the infant colonies, as it will afford them a prefent fupport, until in the courfe of cultivation other fupplies may be produced.3
Again, in 1828, Timothy Flint said:
It is astonishing, amidst all our eager and multiplied agricultural researches, that so little attention has been bestowed upon this interesting and valuable grain. It has scarcely been known, except by Canadian hunters and savages, that such a grain, the resource of a vast extent of country, existed. It surely ought to be ascertained, if the drowned lands of the Atlantic country, and the immense marshes and stagnant lakes of the south, will grow it. It is a mistake, that it is found only in the northern regions of the valley. It grows in perfection on the lakes about Natchitoclies, south of 32°; and might, probably, be cultivated in all climates of the valley. Though a hardy plant, it is subject to some of the accidents, that cause failure of the other grains.*
White men have used this grain chiefly in and near the wild-rice district, yet '"in some parts of the Bay [Quinto bay, Ontario, Canada] there grew wild rice, which was much prized by the Indians, and which was often used by the settlers .... The grain was much smaller than the imported article; not (infrequently, the Indians would collect the grain and sell it to the settlers."5
Alexander Henry said that on July 20, 1775, at Lake Sagunac or Saginaga, 60 leagues from Grand Portage, he bought tish and wild rice "which latter they [the Indians] had in great abundance."6 July 30, he recorded at "Lake des lies," or Lake of the Woods, that tish appeared to be their summer food. He found there a village of 100 people, by whom 20 bags of wild rice were given him, and he obtained there a total of 100 bags of nearly one bushel each. He says that without a large quantity of rice the voyage beyond the Saskatchewan river could not have been prosecuted to its completion.7 Again, August 1,
i Indian Affairs Report, 1870, p. 309. "Carver, Travels, pp.
"Ibid., ixso, p. 176. 4 Flint, Geography unil History, vol. i. p. sr>.
'Carniff, History of the Settlements of Upper Canada (Ontario), with special reference to the Buy Quinte, Toronto, 18(>9, pp. 587-588. 'Henry, Travels, p. 241. 'Ibid., pp. 243, 244.
lit ETH, PT 2—01 - 35
I1(pk_> WILD RICE GATIIKKKKS OF ri'I'KR LAKKS [ETH.ANN.19
lie purchased wild rice on a >andy inland in Lake of the Woods.1 And August It;, at Lake Winnipegon. or \Vini;)ec (Winnipeg) tlie Indians ••made me the usual presents of wild rice and dried meat." All of this rice mentioned by Henry was of the harvest of some preceding veal1. It is very remarkable that only one month before a new harvest. a village of loo people could produce a bushel of rice per capita. No better testimony than Henry's could be given for the dependence of traders upon wild rice during those early years."
Early in January, ITTcS. the provisions at the trading station at Lac la Mort gave out, so John Long, the trader, made a journey of several days to Lake Monontoye (this journey was south toward Lake Nipegon. north of Lake Superior), to try to get some wild rice of Mr Shaw, a fellow trader, as the Indians said it grew in swamps there.* From Mr Shaw's station Mr Long returned in due time with "an Indian slay [sleighl loaded with wild rice and dried meat." On Feb- ruary 23, 1778, "another band [of Indians] came in [to Lac la Mort] consisting of about eighty, men, women and children, who brought dried meats, oats [wild rice], bears' grease, and eight packs of beaver."' Again Long said of Weed lake (Lake Schabeechevan):
On this lake there are about one hundred and fifty good hunters, who make a great many packs of beaver, &c. and this was one inducement for settling here, which was increased by the prospect of a plentiful supply of fish, rice, and cran- berries, which are winter comforts of too great consequence to be slighted.8
Mr Long wrote that the last of January, 1779, he was again reduced in provisions "to a few rish and some wild rice, or menomon (which are kept in muccucks or bark boxes), to support myself and seventeen men; the allowance to each being only a handful of rice and a small fish, about -2 Ib. weight, which is boiled together and makes pleasant soup."7
Jean Baptiste Perrault's Indian Life in the Northwestern Region of the United States in 1783 (manuscript), as translated by Schoolcraft," says it was the custom for the traders to buy provisions (wild rice and dried meat) of the Indians. But during the winter of 17S3 "the greater part of them [Indians around Leech lake, etc.] had gone to pass the winter in the prairies west of the Mississippi [where buffalo were then plentiful] . . . they had no wild rice, the abundant rains, having destroyed it." Notwithstanding this failure, early in May, 1784, these same Leech Lake Indians furnished two fawn skins"
'Henry, Travels. p. 2-M. -Ihi.l.. p. -j:.l.
•VoyiiKi'urs in their journeys subsist cm what ever they can litiil in the country through which they arc passing, rarely taking enough to hist them through. The great waterway from Lake Superior to the Northwest, by way of ( irand portage, along Luke of the Woods ami the Winnipeg »y<tein. I're- (jiu-ntly furnished four different varieties of staple; the lirsi stage furnished nuiize. the next rice, the third peimuican. the lust buffalo meat (Coues, Henry-Tl ipson Jmirnnl. vol. n. p. 539).
' IXIIIK. Voyages and Travels, p. 58. " Ibid., p. 109.
'Ibid., pp. 7.-.. .s.-,. • 'Ibid., ].. 117.
•Schuolcraft. Indian Trihes. vol. in, p. :vw>.
•Ibid., vol. in, IP. :'p."pii. Fawn skins were taken oir nearly whole for use as rice sacks; see also the same work, p. ;iv.i.
JEXKS1 > FOOD OF EARLY WHITES 1103
of wild rico. which had been saved from the harvest of some previous year.
Pike, in 1805,1 describes the Northwest Company's fort at Leech lake as being 60 by 25 feet, one and one-half stories high, with a loft extending over the entire building, and containing, besides bales of goods and peltries, "chests with 500 bushels of wild rice." The same author says of this company's station at Lake de Sable (Sandy lake) in 1806:
They' raise plenty of Irish potatoes, catch pike, suckers, pickerel, and white-fish in abundance. They have also beaver, deer, and moose; but the provision they chiefly depend upon is wild oats, of which they purchase great quantities from the savages, giving at the rate of about one dollar and a half per bushel.2
Harmon wrote in 1804:
This grain ig gathered in such quantities, in this region, that, in ordinary seasons, the North West Company3 purchase, annually, from twelve to fifteen hundred bushels of it, from the Natives; and it constitutes a principal article of food, at the posts in this vicinity.
In 1813 (probably) a party of 70 persons, composed of Hudson Hay Company traders, Indians, and John Tanner, made the trip from Rainy lake to the mouth of the Assinneboin river. They had Indians as hunters to accompany them, "and as we had great quantities of wild rice, we were pretty well supplied wich food."4 Colonel Robert Dickson, Indian agent for the British during the war of 1812-15, wrote to John Lawe of Green bay from Lake Winnebago, February 14, 1814: "All I have left at present is 8 handfulls of foil avoin [wild rice] — 10 Ibs. Flour —2 Shanks Deers legs three frozen Cabbages & a few potatoes."5
Still further light is thrown on the use of wild rice by the traders from the three following extracts. Mr Doty wrote to Governor Cass, under date of November, 1820, of the Indian trade on and about Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Minnesota: "A skin is estimated at $ 2 . . . The articles received from the Indians are sugar, rice, furs. A mocock of sugar, weighing about forty pounds, is received for four skins; a sack of rice, two skins:" etc. "The American South West Fur Com- pany have the chief trade of this country." They sent in packs from Leech lake, Sandy lake, and Fond du Lac in the years 1819 and 1820.6 The Detroit Gazette, of November 24, 1820, says: "The fish and the wild rice are the chief sustenance of the traders, and without them the trade could scarcely be carried on [in the Leech lake and Sandy lake districts]."
'Coues, Pike, vol. i, p. 2x2. = Pike. Expeditions, p. 60.
•''In 1792 the Northwest Company operated nil over the Ojibwa country in the United States. They hurl four departments: First, the Fond du Lac; second, the Folle Avoine, including the country drained by the St Croix river: third, the Lap Courte Oreille. including the country drained by the Chippewa river; fourth, the Lac du Flambeau, including the country drained by the Wisconsin river (Warren, History of the Ojibwas, chapter xxxiv).
'Tanner. Narrative, p. 219. » Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. xi, p. 2112.
8 Morse, Report, p. 55.
1104 WILD KICK (JATHKRKKS OF IMM'ER LAKKS [KTII. AN.N.IU
The section of country referred to in the t'ol lowing quotation pror duced little, if any. mai/e. and :it tlie time of the statement the bison were driven several days westward, so that about all the consumable provisions which the Indians could supply were wild rice and maple, sugar. Robert Stuart, agent of the American Fur Company, wrote to (ieorgc Boyd, agent for Indian affairs at Michilimackinac. asking pel-mission to convey "only twelve barrels of whiskey" into the country where they wished to extend their trade, "but the difficulties they have at present to contend with in extending their trade in a direction where they come in immediate contact with the Hudson Bay Company along the frontier, from the Grand Portage to the Lake of the Woods, the situation of the country, and the means of conveyance, completely preclude them from sending in provisions for the support of the people who are necessarily employed in transporting their goods, and for the prosecution of the trade. The Hudson Bay Company get most of their provisions from the Indians for liquor; and as long as those people have this in their power, our people must inevitably be starved."1
Doty says, quoted by Dr Morse in 1S22: "The fish and the wild rice are the chief sustenance of the traders, and without them the trade could scarcely be carried on."8 Schoolcraft, who gathered his facts during this period, says, in speaking of the wild rice. " Much of it is sold to the traders, to subsist their men, on their visits to the Indians."3
Again we hear from Leech lake in 1835 concerning Mr William T. Boutwell, a missionary:
His remoteness from the white settlements exposes him to many inconveniences, and compels him to depend almost entirely on the fish of the lakes, and the wild rice gathered in the marshes and creeks, for subsistence; and these afford but a preca- rious supply. Ah game is every year becoming scarcer, and their rice so frei|iiently fails, the Indians will soon be driven to the alternative of cultivating the land or per- ishing by famine.*
In the year 1852, Mrs Ellet, a traveler, was given by Mrs Ansell Smith, who resided near the Falls of the St Croix river, "a sack made by the Chippewas [Ojibwa] of braided strips of bark, in a shape rudely resembling a papoose, filled with wild rice which is one of the sta- ples of the territory . . . They [the Ojibwa] sell large quantities to the whites, some preferring it to the common rice of the south." "" It is unnecessary to cite more instances, but wild rice has been used by
' Papers of George Boyd, vol. I, manuscript letter 117 (circa ln'Jii. in Wisconsin nistiiricnl Society's manuscript collections.
» Morse. Report, appendix, p. 31.
There were 17 trading posts about the headwaters of the Mississippi river in ISL'li. Six were of the Columbia Fur Company, '.> were of the American Fur Company. 1 was at Fort Green, 1 was a po-t I'IH- tory n>-ar Fort Snelling, on the St J'eters (Minnesota) river i from a "Circular [from] Indian agency on St 1'ctcrs d'ppcr Mississippi). '<i\ April, isa;." in Papers of George Boyd, vol. n, manuscript 90).
!M •hoolcrat't, Indian Trihes. vol. in. p. I'A.
'Indian Bulletin for lsi,s. number:!, p. 111:!.
1 Mrs Kllet, Summer Rambles, pp. l.M, 152.
JKXKS] FOOD OF WHITES TODAY 1105
settlers and traders to the present time. If it could be cultivated with any certainty it would long ago have become a staple in America for the white population, as it was a staple for many thousand Indians before them. It will be interesting to notice its present use, for which purpose a few citations are presented.
Wild rice was offered for sale in IS'.tti in several towns in Wisconsin and Minnesota. Among those in the former state were Rice Lake, Chetek, and Cumberland, in Barron county. Bloomer in Chippewa county, Shell Lake in Washburn county, and Havward in Sawyer county. In Minnesota it was sold in Bermidji and Park Rapids in Hibbard county, in Tower, St Louis county, in Grand Rapids, Itasca county, and in Minneapolis. Besides in the above markets it is also sold at the various Indian reservations and at towns in their vicinity.1 Mention is made that it has been shipped quite extensively, during the past few years, from Chetek to Menomonie, Chippewa Falls, and other places, and Mr C. W. Moore retailed in Chetek, in 189-1, about 1,500 pounds. His letter2 also states that "all old residents of Barron and Dunn counties are very fond of it." Mr Charles C. Oppel,3 of C. H. Oppel & Sons, wholesalers and retailers in Duluth and Tower, Minne- sota, wrote from Tower: "Most of the cruisers, explorers, and home- steaders take it [wild rice] out into the woods with them. The}1 claim that it is better than tame rice, because it don't take so long to pre- pare it. We also ship considerable; fact is, we handle from 1 to '2 tons a season.'' Mr J. A. Giltillan4 wrote from White Earth, Min- nesota: " Among whites in Minnesota it is used only by missionaries and their families, old Indian traders, and very old settlers, and by a few merchants along the line of the St Paul Railroad." It is used in various lumber camps in the regions where it grows, and is also sold to gun clubs quite extensively; they plant it in small lakes as food for waterfowl. Besides the dealers above mentioned, Currie Brothers, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, advertise it in their Horticultural Guide for 1899. Thev have sold it in small quantities, one or two hundred pounds a year, for the past ten years.5 L. L. May & Co., of St Paul, Minnesota, advertise it in Farm and Floral Guide for 1899. This latter firm sells about 3,000 pounds during the season.6 All of the grain thus sold is gathered by the Indians.
The foregoing facts are sufficient to show that wild rice was a valu- able and valued food to the pioneer whites of the northwest. It must be regretted that so nutritious a cereal was a precarious crop and has not, apparently, warranted extensive cultivation.
Ham indebted to Mr Gardner P. Stickney, of Milwaukee. Wisconsin, for tin- use of manuscript
Idler- concernitiK -t of the facts here presented about the present use of wild rice by the whites.
• =C. W.Moore, letter, Chetek, Wisconsin, April 29.18%. 3Charles c. ( ippel, letter, Tower, Minnesota, May 4, 1896. « J. A. Gilflllan, letter, White Earth, Minnesota. May I.1M96. sCurrie Brothers, letter. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. May (i. 1S99. "L.L.May & Co., letter, St. Paul. Minnesota. May in. IMHI
WILD RICE GATHERERS OF Ul'PER LAKKS
[KTH. ANN.lt)
INDIAN 1'ori i. \TKIN or THK WILD- RICK DISTRICT
It is believed that the section of country in the United States which grew wild rice so abundantly — that is, the northeastern and northern parts of Wisconsin and the part of Minnesota cast of the Mississippi river sustained an Indian population equal to all the other country known as the Northwest territory, viz, all those States lying between the Ohio and Mississippi rivers and Lakes Superior and Huron. This would include southwestern Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio,
TERRITORY IN WHICH RELATIVE INDIAN POPU- LATION IS CONSIDERED
Fio. 48— Map showing areas whose population is compared.
and Michigan (see figure 48). This statement applies to the period when the Indian lived by aboriginal and not by civilized production. Estimates of the Indian population will be presented to substantiate, the belief. Roughly speaking, the wild-rice district is about one-fifth of the entire territory considered.
Mr S. S. Ilcbbcrd1 said of this section of the United States:
In fine, the six States lyin^ east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio — excluding Northeastern Wisconsin* — contained a population in 1(170, of less than
1 Ili-l.licnl, History of Wisconsin under the Dominion of Knincc. p.SS '-There are only live States in the included territory.
INDIANS AT GREEN BAY 1107
twelve hundred warriors [1,200] or eight thousand [8,000] souls . . . Turning now to Northeastern Wisconsin we behold a wonderful contrast. Stretched along hoth sides of Green Bay and the Fox river as far south as Green Lake county was a terri- tory about one hundred and thirty-five miles long and of an average width of thirty miles, which fairly teemed with human life. In the North, and on the islands and along the eastern shore of Green Bay, were the Pottawattamics, a docile people, with a keen instinct for trade, who were seeking to become the middlemen in the commerce between the French and the tribes farther west; they numbered not less than rive hundred warriors [500].' Across the bay were the Menominees, settled upon the river of the same name, a brave but peaceful people.
Charlevoix said of the Menomini,2 " they are, very fine men and the best .shaped in all Canada." Cadillac is very flattering in his remarks of them.3 At the mouth of the Fox river was a mixed village gathered from four or five different tribes; a little distance up the river were the Winnebago. Mr Hebbord thinks that the number of the Winne- bago, Menomini, and of the mixed village, could not have been less than 600 warriors. On the west side of Fox rivet- were the Sank, who numbered 400 warriors. A little way up the Wolf river were the Fox Indians, who numbered about 800 warriors, while southwest of these, on Fox river, was the great palisaded town where the Maskotin and Miami dwelt peacefully together. "Farther on, enveloped in the wild rice marshes, were other towns of the Kickapoos and Mascoutins; all of these tribes together could not have numbered less than the Foxes [800 warriors]."4 "Here then in this narrow strip of territory was a population of thirty-one hundred [3,100 J warriors, or at least twenty thousand [20,000] souls, nearly three times tlie number that roamed in the vast expanse of surrounding solitude." 6
Nothing is claimed for the absolute value of the figures in the fol- lowing estimates. Only their relative value is here considered. Inasmuch as the figures in each table are taken from the same invest!-
1 Hebberd based his estimate, in part at least, en the statement that 300 warriors from this tribe came to Allouez at one time at Chequamegon bay (Allouez, Relations des Jesuites, 1667).
Pere Gabriel Dreuillettes said that they bad 700 warriors, or 3,000 souls: besides, there were with tin-in 100 men of the Tobaceo nation (Relations des Jesuites, 1658, p. 21). This statement seems fully to justify Mr Hebberd's estimate.
! Charlevoix, Journal, vol. in, letter xx, pp. 291, 292.
3 "Les Malhominyou Folles Avoines sont ainsiappelez a cause de la riviere oil leur village est sitne, qui produit une quantity prodigieuse de folle avoiue, qu'ils recueillent et ramassent comme nous faisonsnnslileds . . . Cette nourriture est saine . . . Us ne sent pas si bazanez que les autres. et s'ils ne se graissoient pas, ils surpasseroient les Francois en blancheur. Les femmes sont aussi assez jolies et plus humaines que celles de leurs voisins " (Margry, Deeouvertes, vol. v, p. I'-'l).
* Perrot, Memoire sur les Moeurs . . . des Sauvages, p. 127, gives the population of the principal town of the Maskotin and Miami as 4,000 souls; and Allouez, Relations des Jesuites, 1670, gives it as Sim warriors. See also map of the year 1670-71, in Relations des Jesuites, for distribution of Indian tribes in the Green bay district.
5 From facts already given, Mr Hebberd seems justified in his estimate of the Indian population in the wild-rice district of eastern Wisconsin about the year 1670. At any rate, the thesis of this para- graph, which Mr Hebberd's fuels are here given to substantiate, can hardly be doubted thus far. The population of the wild-rice district of the sources of the Wisconsin. Chippewa. and st Croix rivers, of tin- eastern branches of the Mississippi river, and the southern and western feeders of Lake Superior is not numbered in his estimate. At a very low figure it had M.(XH> souls.
For the disposition of these various tribes see Map of New France (parts of the Tinted stall's and Canada) 1616-1791, to illustrate TheJesuit Relations and Allied Documents, with volume I of Thwaitcs' edition of Jesuit Relations.
1108
WILD KICK GATHKUKKS o] ITI'KR LAKKS
[KTH. ANN. I'.l
r. such :i comparison is certainly legitimate. The estimates were not made for liny such purpose as that for which they aro here used, and there was nothing to Mas the mind of the investigator in favor of one part of the territory against another. Where the estimates are lar^-e, they are so throughout, and vice versa. Thus their relative value is unimpaired. •
TABLK K — llniii/ini'x rsl'maiti' «)' Inilinn /iii/nilntinii in 17641 A— INDIANS IN THE WILD-RICE DISTRICT
I'res <lf 1» Kak- des I'uants:
Puans
Folle- A voinc
[Unknown.] An Su;l de In Bale des Pnants:
Mcchcconqllis
Sakis .
Miiscc mtens
Ouifconfins fur une riviere de oe nom qui tombe dans H- Miffiffipi du
c.iti''ilt- 1'Est
I'rfs cU-s Lacs Suptfriour & Michigan:
Chipwas 5,000
Ottawas 900
[Thi-Mi' Ottawa and. judging by other estimates, one-fifth of the "Chipwas" [Ojibwn] belong in Michigan; so there are left in
tin' rice districts]
Vers Ics f.uirces du Miffifipi:
Sicin x des Prairie 2, 500
Sioux des bois 1, 800
[50 per cent of these were probably in the rice district]
Grand total...
700 350
250 400 500
550
4,000
2,150
1,780
1,250
2.110(1
2,750
20,000
10, 750
44,500
'Bouquet, Relation Historiqiie, p. 114, et scq. B»uc|iiet estimated the warriors as itne-tifth of the total population. The column "Total population " is calculated in accordance with this estimate.
B— INDIANS IN THE REMAINING TERRITORY
UO |
1 750 |
|
1,000 |
5,000 |
|
900 |
4,500 |
|
350 |
1 750 |
|
600 |
3,000 |
|
Stir l'< luahaclic: |
300 |
1,80(1 |
400 |
2 UOO |
|
250 |
l.'iTO |
|
500 |
2, 5(M) |
|
600 |
3 OOU |
|
800 |
4,000 |
|
300 |
1 500 |
|
31 750 |
||
INDIAN POPULATION
1109
TABLE V—E*tim<it<- nf //«• Indian pujnilatnn, hi 1778, at tin' (,nll,,r<il; <>!' ///< l;,-i-<,lntit>n, by a trader who had reside'/ mani/ yean in tin ririnitii "I Detroit1
A— INDIANS IN THE \VI1.II-RICK DISTRICT
Warriors |
Total population |
|
Chippewees, about lake Huron, the upper parts of hike Michigan, and then northwest to the Mississippi, 5,000 (see estimate of 17S4, Table E) |
4 000 |
|
Mineamies, northwest of lake Michigan. |
2 ooo |
10 000 |
Soos, about headwaters of the Mississippi, etc |
500 |
2 000 |
Grand total ... |
;$•> 000 |
|
B— INDIANS IN THE REMAINING TERRITORY
1 lea by |
Wiondots, in neighborhood of Detroit and Sanduskv |
1KO 450 300 300 noo 1,000 |
900 2,250 1,500 1,500 3,000 5,000 |
|
Potowatomies, in neighborhood of St Josephs river, etc. |
||||
Miamies, in neighborhood of Miami river |
||||
Shawanese, on the Wabash and other branches of the Ohio |
||||
Delawares and Munsees, between Pittsburgh and Sandusky.on the Muskintrum |
||||
Chippewees (see estimate of these Indians in the rice district) |
||||
Grand total |
||||
14,150 |
||||
•M-lmolcraft, Indian Tribes, vol. in, pp. .%0, .%!, from manuscripts of James Monroe. This estimate i-es several important tribes out of each district. Only the column headed "Warriors" is irivni •vhi uleraft. The total population is figured at Bouquet's estimate. |
TABLE (i — I.irnl<;iant '/.. M. I'ikf x cxtimuti' of Indian population in the n-;i<t-ri<;> <tix-
trict in 1806 '
Warriors |
Probable total population |
|
1. Chipewavs of Sandv lake |
45 |
345 |
150 |
1 120 |
|
150 |
1 020 |
|
104 |
689 |
|
5. Chipewavs of other bands generally |
1,600 450 |
8,000 1 950 |
300 |
1 350 |
|
8. Sues. Minowa Kantong band (which. Pike says (('ones. Pike, i. |
305 |
2 105 |
9 Sauks |
700 |
2 850 |
400 |
1 750 |
|
221 179 |
||
M'ike, Account of Expeditions. . . . Table F. t^ fain- p. liii, appendix. j>art 1. Both column- "t figures are given by Pike.
2Dr Morse called attention to the following fact ill his report to the Secretary of War in 1x22. AppftMlix. p.:i~r>: The proportion of warriors to the whole number of Indians in a tribe varies or did vary at the time of their support by Indian natural productions. He found that where rlsh con- stituted a large part of the subsistence the proportion of men wasless. This is but to say that in the presence of fish or nourishing subsistence the population increases more rapidly. Among tribes thus favorably situated women and children will be more numerous — a fact to which early chroniclers gave testimony in the wild-rice district of Wisconsin (women as well as children are relatively more numerous among well-nourished primitive peoples, for it WHS the female child which was oftcncst sacrificed by infanticide in such districts as fur the time had a scarcity of subsistence). Morse's figures, which follow, explain themselves:
1110
\VII.I) RICK GATHKKKKS of ri'l'KK I-AKKS
[Kill. A.N.N.19
TAHI.K II — /.'«// 1<> n/ inn-rim-* In iiiml, trili:, iiitliu m-t:<l 1m i/nnli/i/ ,,
Indians south of Kill river
Wiimebagoes
Menominies
Indians in Ohio
Indians in Missouri
Indians west of Kocky iniilintllills,
('iihiiiil)iu river region (ate
much fish).
Warriors
900
600
753
7,560
Whole
number
18,870
5,800 3,900 2,287
30,000
Ratio.
] warrior to 3! whole population 1 warrior totij whole i>opuiali.in
Da
1 warrior to 3 whole population 1 warrior to 4 whole population I warrior to (I whole population
TABLE I — l',xtiiii«t<- /if tin1 Imlinii population in 18221
A INDIANS IN TIIK WILD-RICE DISTRICT
Chippewas, along south shore of Lake Superior to Mississippi river, 19 set- tlements (Colonel Dickson, long a resident among them, estimates their
number at 10,000) 8, 335
Chippewas and Ottawas, south side of Lake Superior, west side of Green bay,
down toward Chicago 1 , 600
.Meiiciiniiiees, Menominee and Fox rivers, Green bay, and Lake Winnebago . .'!. !KH)
Winnebagoes, Lake Winnebago, etc., to Mississippi river .">, sou
Sioux of the Mississippi and St Peters rivers, Leaf tribe, on Mississippi, above
Prairie du Chien, 600 population 300
Red Wing's band, on Lake Pepin, 100 population 50
Great Village of the Yonktons, both sides of Mississippi, above St Anthonys
falls, 1,000 population 500
Total 20, 485
I) — INDIANS IN THE REMAINING TERRITORY
Pottawattamie (Michigan), Huron river 166
Wyandots ( Michigan), Huron river 3"
Ottawas ( Michigan), shore of Lake Michigan and rivers 2, 873
Chippewas (Michigan), Saganau river and vicinity 5, ii(i(»
Delewares, Munsees, Moheakunnunks, and Nanticokes (Indiana and Illinois)
(they were numbered in 1816, but in 1822 were scattered) 1, 700
I'ottaxvattamirs (Indiana and Illinois), southern end of Lake Michigan 3,400
Chippewas ( Indiana and Illinois), with the above Pottawattamies 500
Menominees (Indiana and Illinois), on Illinois river 270
Peorias, Kaskaskias, and Cahokias 36
Kickapoos, central Illinois 400
Kickapoos, Illinois, under treaty to move 1 , 800
Miamics, \Veas, and Kel river Indians, central Indiana 1, 400
Sauks, both sides of Mississippi river, between the Illinois and Wisconsin riv- ers, 4,500 2,250
Foxes, with the abnvc Sanks, 2,000 1,000
Inways (living with the last two, mostly west of Mississippi), 1,000 250
1 lir .Morse's report to Secretary of War, is:;:!, table 1.
JENKS' POPULATION COMPARED 1111
1! — INDIANS IN THE REMAINING TERRITORY Continued
\Vvandots, Ohio 542
SI in \vnees, Ohio 800
Scnccas, Ohio 551
Delewares, Ohio 80
Mohawks, Ohio 57
Ottawas, Ohio 377
Total 24, 158
In the above table (I) it will be noticed that of those Indians located on the Mississippi river only one-half of each tribe is put in the list; thus it is granted that half of them may be on the west side of the stream, and so out of the district now considered; while of the Sioux (Dakota) the following bands are located in the rice fields of the St. Peters (Minnesota) river, though they are west of the Mississippi, and did the district considered include the western as well as eastern head- waters of this river, they would be included in the table:
Little Raven's band, 15 miles below St Peters river 500
Pineshow's band, 15 miles up St Peters river 150
Band of the Six, 30 miles up St Peters river 300
Others, at Little Rapids and St Peters 250
Total 1 , 200
It will also be noticed that no foreign Indians are located in the wild-rice district as yet,1 while in the other territory a total of at least 1,988 Indians have been received from the East. They include the Munsee, Shawnee, Seneca, Delawares, and Mohawk. Also the Potawatomi, Ojibwa (Chippewa), and Menomini Indians to the num- ber of 4,170 have passed south from the wild-rice district into the other territory. Most, if not all, of the above movements are due to the influence of white men. Yet, notwithstanding this fact, the wild- rice district continued to sustain a much larger population per square mile than the other territory under consideration.2 Besides the Indians in the wild-rice district, there were for many years hundreds, perhaps thousands, of white men engaged in various ways in the fur trade, who subsisted largely on Indian natural production.
What, then, was the cause of this relatively very dense population?
Mr Hebberd3 says that the strip of territory above described, along Green bay and Fox river, was "like an oasis in a desert . . . The land was exceptionally rich in all essentials of barbaric plenty."
'The Oneida and 8tockbrid),'e Indians came from New York to the wild-rice district near Green bay in 1*21. Jlorsu's report was printed In 1822, while some of his farts WITH collected us curly as 1820.
sSchoolerat't, Indian Tribes, vol. in, p. »l. published in 1853, gives estimates which slum- the rice district hiul over 22,000 Indian population, while the remaining territory had less than 21,000. In 1S29
(House Ex. Doc. 117, Twentieth Coin,'., s mil scss. i the population of the wild-rice district was
estimated at •tf.iiou, and of the remaining territory at 21,167.
a Hebberd, op. cit., pp. 35, 36.
111-2 WILD KICK OATHEKKKS OK ri'l'KK LAKKS [KTII. ANN .111
Charlevoix ' declared it \vus the "most charming country in all the world." "The lakes and rivers were full of tisli and the forests of game: fuel was plenty; the soil was easy to till and yielded richly. But the crowning attraction, doubtless, ivas the wild rice marshes. offering mi abundant harvest without any labor save that of gathering it in the autumn. There indeed, was the Indian Utopia." Oablon called it "a terrestrial Paradise, but the way to it is as ditliciilt as the way to heaven." It was o-uarded on the east and north by the (I real Lakes, on the west by the immense marshes of the Mississippi system. It was guarded internally by the many prosperous, powerful, con tented Indian residents, and externally by the Iroquois on the east and the Dakota on the west, both of whom, because of their tierce and deadly enmity, the Ojibwa called "Adders."
These Indians in the wild-rice district exhibited some social aspects which were quite unique. First, the Winnebago, of Siouan stock. had injected themselves among the Algonquian Indians, and. occupy- ing a strip of land from the Mississippi due east to the foot of (ireen bay, they lived at peace with the Menomini, Kickapoo, Maskotin, Miami, Potawatomi, and other Indians of the Algonquian stock. Among the rice fields were villages in which even four different tribes dwelt in barbaric harmony. Early chroniclers frequently spoke of the superior physical manhood of the Indians in this dis- trict, as well as of their peaceful dispositions. On the one hand, these facts were probably due to the superior quality of their subsistence. as wild rice and tish, and on the other, to the abundance of such sub- sistence, and to the accompanying fact that many could dwell near together; and also to the fact that they must be more sedentary than the plains Indians, in order to reap their annual crop. The river influ- ence in general would also tend toward peaceful life. Rivers and lakes with their innumerable waterways (such as the wild-rice district exhibits probably more completely than any other section of equal size in America) furnished quick, permanent, and easy means of travel and transportation. Thus, even in canoeing, they would learn the value of mutual help. Canoes were less easily carried long distances by land than were the effects of the plains Indians. Constant connection with wild-rice and maple-sugar areas would lead to villages within easy access. At such village sites loyalty to kinship in the tribe was planted. and out of it grew patriotism for country, as was noticeable when the Indians demanded lands where were situated their rice fields, their sugar orchards, and the graves of their fathers. Thus were laid two corner stones of civilization, viz, the peaceful massing of various tribes, and love for a common country. Here, however, the founda- tion ceased. Wild rice, which had led their advance thus far. held them back from further progress, unless, indeed, they left it behind them, for
iChark-voix. k'lt.-r -JO.
•"•:XKS] CAUSES FOR CONSUMPTION 1113
with them it was incapable of extensive cultivation. Its supplv was precarious, and there was no way of making it certain. One year the gathering of 3 or -1 per cent of the crop gave food for a winter's con- sumption, another year its failure, which might occur for any one of many reasons, threatened the people with starvation. In civilization one class of people at least must have comparative leisure in which to develop short-cut methods of doing old things, of acquiring the tradi tions of the race, and of mastering new thoughts and methods. Such leisure, is impossible with a precarious food supply. But, in spite of these facts, for barbaric people during the period of barbarism, the most princely vegetal gift which North America gave her people without toil was wild rice. They could almost defy nature's law that he who will not work shall not eat.
The facts presented in this section prove that the wild-rice district gave natural support to a larger number of Indians (besides many hundred whites) than did the adjoining territory of nearly five times its area. The facts further prove that wild rice was a chief means which made possible this greater population.
The causes which led to the use of wild rice for food are lost to his- tory. Even tradition, with her many volumes written so full of inter- esting and valuable facts, gives no information on the subject, except that man's hunger caused him to eat the grain. The best evidence now known is that of the Relations des Jesuites. .It has been noticed that Ojibwa Indians and c,ar\y settlers used wild rice in Canada on Quinto bay and the north shore of Lake Ontario, on the north and west shores of Lake Erie, on the east shore of Lake Huron, and on Georgian bay. as well as on Rice and adjacent lakes in the included point of Canadian territory, now Ontario. The Jesuit fathers lived in Indian wigwams, subsisted on Indian foods, were interested and keen observers and intelligent chroniclers of the entire life of the Indian. Religious, social, and economic life received their careful attention. Yet not one word appears to have been written, either by them or contemporaneous chroniclers, about the use of wild rice in this district.1 Its first mention is that of 163-i in connection with the Menomini Indians, who even then were called "wild-rice men" by their Algon- quian kinsmen. It therefore seems probable that in the Ontario trict described above the Indians did not use wild rice until of game, caused by the fur trade with the whites, drove them to it. The Menomini Indians, however, did depend upon it extensively before such scarcity. What influence the scarcity of game had upon the use of wild rice by the other Indians in the wild-rice district it is impossi- ble to say. However, the Winnebago and several thousand Dakota
l Miss Einniil Helen Blair, ussisuim editor of the Th Haiti's' edition .if Tile .It-suit Relations and Allied Jii.rnments i Cleveland, 1896 +,73 volumes), is the authority for the above statement, mud.' before the volume^ \vi-ri- iireessible.
^JU^UIPUJ 1111
*ir Algon- i .
ntario dis- I f il scarcity
hem to it. •
1114 \\1I.I) RICK UATHKKKRS OF ri'l'KK LAKKS [ETH.AN.V l;i
Indians of the Siouan stock, and the Miami. Potawatomi. Sank. Fox. Maskotin. and Kickapoo Indians of the Algonquian stock used rice to a certain extent while still surrounded by small game and even by buf- falo. The powerful and numerous Ojibwa Indians came into posses- sion of wild rice during the lirst period of the fur trade: consequent Iv theirs also was not a choice between starvation or the use of rice. This fact i> attested by the Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for 1864. in which year $40,000 worth of furs were •fathered. But inasmuch as the rice fields where rice is harvested are annually failing, but where it is not harvested rice still grows luxuri- antly, it is probable that in most of the wild-rice district the grain has been gathered only a few hundred years, say from three to five, in such quantities as are shown by the tables on page 1075 and following.1
' The following is from White Earth agency, Minnesota, in 1X94: "A good many on the different rc.-emitions have, in their proper seasons, gathered wild rice, blueberries, cranberries, and snake- root, and made eonsiderable quantities of maple sugar; but these are now mere incidents to ilieir suppc rt. The lakes in which the wild riee once grew in such abundant calamities have become almost barren" (House Ex. Doe., 3d sess., 53d Cong., 1894-95, vol. XV, p. 150) .
CHAPTER VTI
INFLUENCE OF WILD RICE ON GEOGRAPHIC NOMEN- CLATURE1
INTRODUCTION
One of the simplest and most natural reasons for calling a particular locality by a definite name is that that locality is characterized by some one product. This is the way that a great deal of America was named by her primitive people. There is "Trout lake," "Elm lake," "Sugar Camp lake," "Rat lake," "Beaver lake," "Rice lake," "Wolf river," " Big Rice river," "Little Rice river," etc. Such names become fixed by continuous use, and often persist long after the object for which they were given has perished.
The purpose of this chapter is to throw further light upon the ex- tensive habitat of wild rice, and the importance of the grain to the Indian. It is desirable to call attention to the fact that some of the places which now bear the name of "Rice" were not so named by the Indian. It will be noticed that the Siouan name for wild rice is found only west of the Mississippi river, except as it is applied to a few small streams immediately tributary to this river from the east, while the Algonquian names dominate the territory east of the river. The explanation of this is the fact that the Dakota Indians were nearly all driven from the territory east of the river before the white man learned their local geographic names. After that time the Indian languages throughout the wild-rice district east of the Mississippi river were Algonquian, with the single exception of that of the Winnebago, who speak the Siouan language.
The dominance of the French in this district during the period of the fur trade explains the prevalence of French geographic names. The making of English names is going on to-day as in the past. Names referring to wild rice are given because of the prevalence of the grain, or are a translation of an Indian or French term.
i This chapter can be, at best, only a catalogue, and nut even im alphabetic one. For purposes of historic and scientific study, if for no other, Indian geographic names ought to be maintained. If the translation of the Indian name is ugly, or not euphonious, the original is often very musical in sound. No one would think of exchanging the Anglicized "Chicago" for its Indian equivalent "Place of the skunk." Certainly no argument need be made for the beauty of the Anglicized Indian names Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Mississippi. There is generally better reason for maintaining Indian geographic names than there is for replacing them by some fortuitous name. Yet un-rientific and senseless as are some names, one acknowledges amusement when lie learns that a
map is made designating a lake " Uncle Lake," in honor of an old gentleman who is a frequent
visitor or hanger-around in a State land office.
1115
1116 WILD RICE GATHKRKRS OK UPPER LAKKS [KTH.A.NN.I'.I
SECTIONS OF COUNTRY '
No other plunt which \v:is used for food by the North American Indian during the period of Indian natural production has stamped its name upon so extensive a section of territory as lias the wild-rice plant. About the year 1820 Dr Morse found that "the rice country extended north to the Lake of the Woods, thence along the northern borders of the United States to Lake Superior; and south to the Ouisconsin [Wis- consin] and Fox rivers, and from the last river northerly along the west side of Lake Michigan."' One reads that in 1860 this territory to the south of Lake Superior was called by the Canadians ?<• jxn/x </, /-/ full,' avoine. The French Canadians often spoke of these southern lands as les terras follea or la folle avoine as "'Je veux hiverner a lit
At about the date of Dr Morse's Report Schoolcraft said that the /•'nil, Ai'n'uii: <'innit/'ij included Lac du Flambeau, Ottowa lake. Yellow river, "Nama Kowagun" of St. Croix river, and Snake river.' He presented at that time a map which has drawn upon it a "Great trail to the Folle Avoine country," leading southwest from near present Houghton, on Lake Superior, Wisconsin, into the above " Folle Avoine country." As early as 1792 the great Northwest Fur Company desig- nated one of its four departments, the country drained by the St Croix river, the Folle A>-I>/H< </, /Hirf/m-nt.*"
MiimniKili IK!,- (Chambers island) in Green bay is given on Farmer's Fourth Sheet or Map of Wisconsin, Iowa, etc, John Farmer (Detroit, 1848).
Manomin county was created in Minnesota in 1859 by Mr Fridley. In 1870 it was changed to Fridley township of Anoka county.6
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan has a Menominee county, the sec- tion of country which is separated from Wisconsin by the Menominee river.
There is a Menominee township in Waukesha county, Wisconsin, and a Manomin township in Anoka county, Minnesota, while Freeborn county, Minnesota, has a Rlceland ti>ii'nxji!j>.
Rice count v. Minnesota, is so named out of respect for the Honor- able H. M. Rice.
Great Rice M\arsh\ is located on the south side of St Pierre (Minnesota) river near its junction with the Mississippi river on a map by Carver in 1766 or immediately after.7 In 1796 this same section of territory was called /<'», »<///,/<. and along the north side of the river farther to the west were
"Names referring lc> wild rice arc in italics. In these namev the original form is literally followed.
'Morse, Report,appendix, p.30. ;1 Kohl, Kitchi-Gami, pp. 117,118.
< Schoolcraft. Summary Narrative, appendix, p.f>7r>.
'Warren, History of the ojibwiiys. chapter xxxiv.
•Cones. Pike, vol. in. . p. SS7, under " Fridley." ~ Map with Carver's Travels . . . 1766-1768.
•Hap, London, A. Arrowsmith. January 1,17%: additions, 180-2.
JENKS1 WILD-RICE CITIES 1117
CITIES, STATIONS, ETC
Indian villages are very often situated at such places as are best also for the villages of early settlers, as the head of tidal waters and the falls of rivers, where there is a natural stopping place, because there boats must be unloaded and portaged, and there also fish for food are usually plentiful. Besides these reasons, which appeal to both the Indian and the white man, the latter finds there necessary water power. Fertile grassy valleys and elevated table-lands bring to both the Indian and white man valuable advantages for a settlement. The Indian seeks to locate his village in a place of safety near his food supply. The sites of a vast number of our present American cities were previously covered with the village dwellings of the Indian, and a number of these places still bear their earlier Indian names. Many such villages were named from the presence of wild rice.
North Dakota claims a Wild R!i-e station and a /!!>; /•/'//<• station, both in Cass county.
In Michigan, Menominee county has a .!/»//»//////<•/• station and also a Mnxiiii inee River station, while Calhoun county has a R'i<;- ( '/v>-k station and a Rice Lake station.
In Ontario, Canada, there is a Menomonee station on Parry sound.
Jo Daviess county, Illinois, has a Menominee station on Big Menom- inee creek.
In the preceding chapter it was noticed that the Indians about the St Croix and Chippewa rivers received their name from the abun- dance of wild rice in their vicinity, and Carver presented a map in 1766-68 which located Rice Village of the Ojibwa Indians along the east shore of the St Croix river.
According to a map made at the opening of the nineteenth century1 there was a Menomonids castle on Fox river, near its mouth, at Green bay, and a Menomonie town on the west side of the bay.
Schoolcraft, about the year 1820,2 mentions two "Indian Spring villages," Great Rice Place and Little Rice Place, on the Namakgum [Nemacagon] river, a southern tributary of the St Croix. These villages were probably in Washburn county, Wisconsin.
In 1836 a map3 presents five Mennomonie r>7/a</t-x on the west shore of Green bay, besides one Mennomonie village on Big Mennomonie river [Menominee river], and another Menonncnnonie village on Fox river, a short way from its mouth, another at the head of Lake Win- nebago, and still another farther to the east. Probably one of the above villages is presented in 1837 as M,:ii>ni,ini<-i'Ule on Fox river.*
1 Map, A. Arrowsmith, London, 1796: additions, 1802. sschoolcraft, Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes . . . p.SfiSi. s The Tourist's Pocket Map oj Michigan . . . by Mitchell, 1836. 'Topographical Map nf Wisconsin Territory ... by Lyttle, 1W.
19 ETH, PT 2—01 3ti
1118 WILD BICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANN.W
The following year, 1838, Mitchell gives1 this last village as
Mi lill'illiniii, I'illi .
There are in Wisconsin numerous cities and stations which dear their name because of the presence of wild rice in their vicinity, as fellows:
Mi nniiwnee, in Menomonee township. Waukesha county.
.)A nomonee Falls, in Menomonee township. Waukeslia county.
.!/< nmnonie, in Dunn county.
Mi nniiuniii •finifftini. in Dunn county, although this may be the Menomoniede, in Dunn county, as given on a map in IS'.M;.-
North Menoi/iniiii , in Dunn county.
U'n-i' Lake, on Rice lake, in Stanford township, Barron county.
South Rice Lake, on Rice lake, in Stanford township, Barron count}'.
Sice Lake, in Langlade county.
Rict/i'illi', in Washington county.
Nenamon.ee, on Red Cedar river in Dunn county.3
Minnesota also has a small number of rice cities, stations, etc, as follows:
Manomin, in Manomin township, Anoka county (Illustrated Histor- ical Atlas of the State of Minnesota, 1874, Chicago).
Rice Lake, in Dodge count}7 near Rice lake in Clearmont township, Steele county (ibid.).
Rice, in Zumbrota township, Goodhue county (Goodhue Countv Plat Book, 1894).
Rieeford, on Riceford creek, in Spring Grove township, Houston county (Houston County Plat Book, 1878).
Manotnin, at the mouth of Rice river in Ramsey county (Blaneh- ard's Map of the North Western States, Chicago, 1866).
Rice T\pwn\t at Sandy lake, probably in present Aitkin county (Map of the United States, etc., John Melish. isici.
Maim n mi /i, on Crow river, in Meeker county (Sectional Map of the Surveyed Portion of Minnesota and the North Western Part of Wis- consin. 1860).
Rice City, south of the preceding in Meeker county (ibid).
RIVERS, CREEKS, LAKES, AND PONDS
Rivers, creeks, lakes, and ponds in the territory under considera- tion which bear the name Rice, or some of its various synonyms. present unmistakable evidence that at some time such waters grew wild rice (it is, of course, recognized that such a name could have been given in honor of some person, but an effort has been made to exclude all such from the list). The names which follow, therefore, tell their own tale:
1 Map of the Settled 1'art of Wisconsin. In\\,-i. <-\r.
«Thc Kiiilrond Mii|p<if Wisi-cinsiu . . . by !>..!. MrKi'imr, Knilnmil CommissinniT (1896).
'Lloyd's New Mup of tlir rnitnl st.it.->. tin- Ciinadas, etc. (1862).
JESKS1 WILD-RICE RIVERS 1119
In Ontario, Canada, Trent river, which leads from Rice lake irto Quinto bay, is called Rice R[iver\ in 1817. ' All other maps examined, both prior to and following the one named, call the stream Trent river.
Menomines river, discharging into Green bay and forming the bound- ar}' between the upper peninsula of Michigan and Wisconsin, has had numerous names. Hoffman 2 spells the word Mencmiini. On the same page he also says that the word is from the Indian Mi'nikQ! nise'pe. Verwyst says that the word is a corruption of manorninig, or oumaiiominig , meaning "wild-rice people. "; The following various synonyms have been given to this stream:
Menmrumee. Blanchard's Map of the North Western States, Chi- cago, 1866.
Mun-nom-o-nee. Map of Wiskonsan, Charles Doty and Francis Hudson, 1848.
Munnomonee. Map of Wiskonsin Territory compiled from Public Surveys by Captain Cram, 1839.
Menn&monie. Map of the Settled Part of Wisconsin and Iowa, etc., by Augustus Mitchell, 1838.
Big Meiiiiiniioiiie. The Tourist's Pocket Map of Michigan, by J. H. Young, published by S. Augustus Mitchell, Philadelphia, 1836. l.illl, M, iiiKiiiionie river is shown a short distance up the bay; it is probably the present Fort river.
Menomine. Dr Morse's Report, appendix, p. 47.
Monomonie. Map of the United States, by Abraham Bradley, jr., 1804.
Jfonomonies. Map, States of America, by J. Russell, 1799.
R. des Oumalouminec ou de lafolle auvin-e. Map with Relations des Jesuites, 1670-71.
R. des On nuil inuninecs. Map, Canada, Louisiane et Terres Angloises, 1755, Le S r D'Anville.
M<il </ in !>w. A Map of the British Plantations on the Continent of North America, by Henry Overton [circa 1750].
OwtmdUnamnec R. Map, North America, D'Anville, 1752, patron- age of Louis, Duke of Orleans.
R. des Oumaloumine ou de la Folle Farine, Map, Le Canada, ou Nouvelle-France, Paris, 1718.
R. des Oumalouminec. Map, Ameriquc Septentrionale, D'Anville [1746].
The present Red Cedar river, discharging into the Chippeway river, and also the Chippeway river, which in turn empties into the Missis- sippi at the southern end of Lake Pepin, have at various times borne names synonymous with wild rice. About the year 1850 Warren
'Map, " United States of America. No. 55" [1817]. "Hoffman, The Menomini Indians, p. 39.
» Verwyst, Geographical Names in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan having a Chippcwu Origin, in Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. xn, p. 393.
1 I'JO WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKKS [KTH.AXN.IU
called t ho Rod Cedar the .][< -ninn-'i/i-, , } and at about the same tinin Schoolcraft named that part of Red Cedar river above Rice lake, in Barron county, the Full,' .[>•<>,'/,,."• In 1831 it seems that the entire stream was called Full, .1/v//,,,. In lS48the river is given as M, n<nu- onie, and flows through JA///»;///«/7w// L< //.;.< This is undoubtedly the Hi:; Ink,-, in Barren county, Wisconsin. About 1850 Warren speaks of /'/•<///•/<• ft/'r, Lul-i, or Mush-ko-da-tnwrt-o-mwire-kin, or Luc la Folh [Prairie lake] as connected with IVllican lake, whicli dis- charges into the Red Cedar river.* This Prairie lake receives the waters of Ric> ( '/>,/.'
In the year 1836 r,-Uic«n Rice Za&gwas given on Red Cedar river." This last is probably Lake Chetak, in Ban-on county.
In 1795 "Chippeway" river is given on a map.7 Previous to that time it had very generally been called Jfalamwnican, as in 1755, 1750, and 1746. 8
The Jtfenomvnee river, discharging into Lake Michigan at Milwau- kee, Wisconsin, was the Jfimomonee river on a map in 184-1. 9 It was Menominie river on a map five years previous,10 and Mt.-nii<>ni<in<>e on Mitchell's map of 1838; n while in 1835 it was given as theMeno>nt//« .l~
The river has a tributary which is now called Menomonee creek, which, for most of its course, flows in Ozaukee county.
The Fox river in Wisconsin, which discharges into the southern end of Green bay, had a Lac <!<•.•< Folles Avoinea, according to a French map of 1688. 1S It is the only lake then represented along the course of the Fox river. Another very old French map " has three lakes called Lac des Folles Avoines on the present Fox river. An expansion of the Fox river 1 mile wide, near its discharge into Lake Winnebago, was called LiiL-< M, in>,, ,/',,<•// in 1835. 15 The author probably referred to an arm of the present Big Buttes Des Morts lake. This arm in 1836 was called Moiiinnnnii- Ldki>.u The same year it was also referred to as
i Warren. History of the Ojibways, p. 309.
8 Schoolcraft, Summary Narrative, appendix, p. 543.
3 Fanner's 4-sheet or Map of Wisconsin, etc., by John Farmer (Detroit, 1848).
4 Warren, op. oil,, p. 308.
5 Map, The Lake Region of Northern Wisconsin and Michigan, by Ring, Fowle & Co. (Milwau- kee, 1893).
•Schoolcraft. Tnirty Years.
7 A Map of tlic Western 1'nrt of the Territories belonging to the United States [1795].
8 A Map of the British and French Dominions in North America, by John Mitchell, 1755; A Map of the British Plantations, by Henry overtoil, 1750: Ameri(|iie Septentrional, by D'Anville [1746].
" Map oi Wiskonsiui, by Charles Doty and Francis Hudson, 1844.
10 Map of Wiskonsin Territory, by T. .1. Cram, 1839.
"Map by Mitchell, 1838.
12 A Map of a Portion of the Indian Country lying East and West of Mississippi, for the Topograph- ical Bureau, 1835.
13Copy by I. A. Lapham from a map in the Chicago Historical Collection, destroyed by fire in 1871, entitled 'Tiii' partie de la Carte oe L'Amerique .Septentrionale en L'Annee 1688, par J. Baptiste Louis Franqiientin HYI) Dt" ROY. a Quebec en Canada."
"See map in Winsor, Mississippi Basin, p. 23, reproduced by Marcel from a map in the Marine at Paris.
" Featherstonhangh, A Canoe Voyage, vol. i, p. 174.
"Map of the Territories of Michigan and Ouisconsin, by John Farmer, 1836.
™y™l WILD-RICE RIVERS 1121
Mennomomi.1 In 1850 ;i M, n<, ,„/'/, Lul;- was shown on Fox river imme- diately below the present Moundsville, at the upper end of Bufl'alo lake.'
M. in in, in n river, probably the present Wolf river in eastern Wis- consin, was shown on a map in 1836."
The present Little Eau Plaine river, a tributary of the Wolf river between Marathon and Portage counties, Wisconsin, was once known as MH-, in-ill! n a-kiuty-a-kawy Se-be or Rice Stalk* river.* It also flows through a Rid Lnl; .
Between 47° and 48° north latitude a river flows from the east into the Red river of the North which has been noted for more than one hundred years for its production of wild rice. On recent maps it is known as Wild Rice River. This river also has a large tributary csillcd South Branch Wild Rice Rim; which in 1836 was said to drain Lai;- la Folle Avoine between Ottertail lake and the sources of the Crowing (Crow Wing) river.5 In 1885 Bell wrote6 that at one time the Wild- Rice river was known as the Menomone, and also as the Pse river. In the years 1861, 1848, and 1843 the river was called or Wild Rice River."1 On map of 1857 this stream was c liii-i •/-.* In 1836 it was known as la Folle Avoine.9 In 1822 Dr Morse called it Wild Outs 6V.,10 while Beltrami in 1828 wrote it Wild Out* river.11 According to a map of 1816, Wild Oats Cr\«k\ and Rice Straw Cr\eek\ both discharge into Red river of the North from the east, between 47 and 48° north latitude. It is quite probable that these refer to the Wild Rice Rii-<<r and South Branch Wild Rice River, as these two streams join not far from where their waters enter the Red river of the North. At the beginning of the nineteenth century the stream was called Rice Strair river, and immediately north of it is a Wild It'"-, river which flows into Red Lake river, which, in turn, empties into the Red river of the North.12 This Wild Kin- river last spoken of is probably the Clear Water river rising in Mitcha or Big Boulder lake on Mitchell's map.
Another historic wild rice producing river flows into the Red river of the North. This second one discharges near Fargo, North Dakota,
i The Tourists Pocket Map (if Michigan, Mitchell (
- Map, The State of Wisconsin, Lapham (Milwaukee, 1850).
I Farmer. Map of the Territories of Michigan and Wisconsin, 1836.
- Wisconsin Historical Collections, vol. i. p. 1'_'0.
6 Map of the Territory of Wisconsin, by Hurr. 1836.
'•('has. X. Bell, Historical Names an.l Places, in Trans., Manitoba Hist, and Sci. Soc.,vol. XVII, P. 6 -WinnipcK. 1885).
"Map of tin' 1'nited Slates of North America, supplement to Illustrated London News (June I, lsi;lt: map. rnilcd states of North America, by Sherman * Smith (New York, IMSi ; map. Hydro- graphical Basin of the I'pper Mississippi ISiver. Xieollct. IMIi.
- A New and Complete Railroad Map of the rnited States, \Vm. Ferris (New York [1857]). " Map of the Territory of Wisconsin, by Burr, issti.
ln Ma]' u i!ll Millar's Report.
n Hcltrami. PilKriimiKc. vol. n. See map of Mississippi river.
i-JThe - ......... 1 section of the map entitled ••London, A. Arrowslilith, January 1, 17%. Additions
1 SI ,•_>."
1122 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ASN in
and flows from the southwest, l/nlike the river just considered, this one hoars the Sioutin name. In 18H1 it is found as 117/7 I,'ic, river.1 In isiii.t it was called 7V'c or 11 "A/ R!<; .'' while in 1848 and 1848 it was given as I'.tHni or 117/7 Rice river.3 A map of 1838 gives the stream as 7V river.*
During the year 1836 two synonyms are found, the word being written both 7 Vs and 7^>w." Beltrami named this stream, as well as the one on the east side of the Red river of the North, the H7/</ ( >,il» river,7 the one from the west being called Sau - Watpa. W</f/></' is the Dakota word for river.8 Keating said that in 18'23 the traders called both of these tributaries of the Red river of the North 1 17/7- /•/',-, . or Fdttv .1 ''<>! in.9 Tanner calls the one which discharges from the west the " Gaunenoway," and Coues says that '' Gaunenoway stands for Manominee.1*
Besides the Red Cedar river, which discharges into the Chippeway and through it into the Mississippi, and both of which have borne names synonymous with wild rice, other waters will be mentioned which feed the upper Mississippi, all of which bear the wild rice cognomen.
In 1892 there was a Man&min river flowing into the Mississippi from the east. It drains both Rice Lake in Aitkin county, Minnesota. and a Manomin lake near at hand, while immediately north of it is another Rice lake draining into Sandy lake at Aitkin county.11 \\"I<1 Oats river is the name given this stream in 1819. 12 Altout fifteen years previous Lewis and Clarke called it Wilil Onfx R\iver\.1* It enters the Mississippi river from the east between degrees 4t! and 47 north latitude. This is probably the Mar/miiin river of the map "Hydro- graphical Basis ..." made in 1843. Beltrami wrote that he named two lakes, some 5 or 6 miles in circumference, near the source of the Mississippi. Maawmeay-EJa/ny-aguen^ because, as he explained it. they were full of wild rice.14 Psin-ta-n'iiL'-pn-ilmi or Little Rice Ji//;r is now called Rice Creek, and empties into the Mississippi from the east a few miles north of Minneapolis.15 Pi/iiil/i/'in or Munniiiiii or
1 Map of the United States of North America, supplement to Illustrated London News (June 1, 1861).
*General-Karte Dor Vereinigten Staaten von Norcl-Amerika, by Albrecht Platt, 1850 (after T. Calvin Smith's New York Karten).
8 United States of America, by Sherman and Smith (New York. 1848) ; map, Hydrofrraphicnl Basin of the rppcr Mississippi Kiver, after Xieollet (1843).
4 Map of the Settled Part of Wisconsin. Mitchell, 1838.
'Map of the Territories of Michigan, by Farmer, 1836.
•Map of the Territory of Wisconsin, by Burr, 1836.
7 Beltrami, op. cit.
s Ibid. .vol. i! 187.
• Keating, Narrative, vol. n, :(7, lOOones. New Light, vol. I. note, p. 147. « Plat Book of Morrison county 11892).
'-Warden. United States of North America, vol. I, p.117 (Edinburgh, 1819). '•< Map in Lewis and Clarke, Travels. HBeltnum. op. cit . vol. II, p. 408. '•"' (iordou, op. cit., p. 58.
•IK-NKS] WILD-KICE RIVERS 1123
Rice Lake discharges its waters into the Mississippi by a short thor- oughfare in section 24, township 146 north, range 35 west in Min- nesota.1
In 1879 Aitkin county, Minnesota, had three Sice lakes northeast of Mille Lacs. In one place the northernmost one is called Manoman, while again the westernmost one is Manomin*
Coues speaks3 of the Pinnidiwin or Carnag or De Sota river. It is the west branch of the source of the Mississippi, and flows through Lal-i> La Folh, Rice, or M<ii,<>nt!i<. Rand and McNally now call this waterway L<.ik> Mbnomma. Schoolcraft speaks of the lake as Lac /» l''dl!i . and M»nnmina from Monom&nakauning (place of wild rice).*
The Mississippi also drains Manomin L\ake\ between Wakomite creek and "Cow Horn," north of Itasca lake.5 There was also a Rice river flowing into the Mississippi from the east, a short distance above St. Paul, in 1856. 6 It is called Rice creek in 1874, while Coues later calls it Rice or Manomin cr\eek\'1
Neill mentioned Otonwewakpadan or Rice creek in Minnesota as one of the two places where, traditionally, the Dakota first planted maize.8 The same writer in translating the French author of the Memoir of the Sioux spoke of Wildrice Lake 15 leagues below Riviere au Serp- ent (Snake river), Minnesota. It may be the present Sice Lake in northeastern Anoka county. Dr Morse mentions Paue-qwm-me-no- iii'ni-ic-con or Rice Lake as being 20 or 25 miles south of Sandy lake, Aitkin county, Minnesota.9
Coues savs that a feeder of Sandy lake near Leech lake, Minnesota, which flows in at the southernmost end is called "Sandy, Sandy Lake, or Rice Lake S[iver] ". This river has a branch from Manomin or /,'/•< Lake, and either the branch or the entire river is the M /mi,,, •>///- x'llii or Wild Oats river of Beltrami, according to Coues.10 Rice Lake in Little Falls township, Morrison county, Minnesota, is fed by Rice creek and discharges into the Mississippi by way of the Platte river.11
In the year 1856 a Rice Lake was drained by Le Suer [Le Sueur] river into Minnesota river from the south.12 Seven years prior to this the lake is called Psah L\ake\ and is drained by Psah R[iver] into Le Sueur river and then into the Minnesota. The same map 13 presents
i Cones, Botanical Gazette, December, 1894, p. 506.
- Mnp, Department of the Interior, General Land Office, state of Minnesota, 1879. 3 Coues, Pike, vol. I, p. 163, note.
* Schoolcraft, Summary Narrative, pp. 248. 249.
Minnesota Historical Collections, vol.vm, part 2 (18%), p. 236, pi. iv.
I Map nf southern Minnesota and part of Wisconsin, by Harris, Cowles & Co. (Boston, 1856). Tones, Pike, note 6, p. 94.
• NVill, Indian Trade, in Minnesota Historical Society's Collections, vol. i, p. 32. •'Morse, Report, appendix, p. 35.
'"Cones, Pike, note 49, p. 137.
II Morrison County Plat Book, 1892.
'= Map of southern Minnesota by Harris, Cowles & Co., Boston, 1856.
n Map of the Territory of Minnesota, exhibiting route of the expedition to the Red river of the north, 1X49, by John Pope.
1124 WIIJ) KK'K GATHKKEKS OK MITER LAKES [KTH.ANX.I-.I
a /W* L\fik<-\ just nortli of the Minnesota river where Ri<-> marshes were located on earlier maps. Coues explains tliat U'x; R!i;-r near Bniiner county, Minnesota, is the Nagajika creek of Nicollet.1 I!!,/ Ri<; R'n-'i- and a Littl< lii<-< /»'/'/•//•. in Oneida couaty, Wisconsin, discharge their waters into the Wisconsin river.
Jo Daviess county. Illinois, has a ///'</ M< n«ni in« <-r,,k. which U a tributary of the Mississippi river at "Nine-mile island" or "Number 232," and this creek is also fed by a smaller one called Littlr .!/< /«<//»'//< < creek.
A Rice creek discharges into Kalamazoo river at Marshall, Michigan .
It is believed that the following bodies of water, mostly lakes, receive their names from wild rice. Their location is given as accurately as is possible, but no claim is made for the identification and exact location of all the places previously named in this chapter, in consequence of which some of them may be unavoidably repeated in tlie present list:
I'lii/i/int Lake, Winnebago county. Wisconsin, from the Menomini word powahecainie, or "threshing [wild-rice]."
Rice Lake, Ontario, Canada, between lake Simcoe and Quinto bay. Lake, Newago count}', Michigan, Grant township. Lake, the head of Shell river, a tributary of the St Croix. is given by Warren, History of the Ojibways, p. 164.
Rice Lake, Forest county. Wisconsin, township 35, range l~2. near Crandon.
R!<>e Lake, Forest county, Wisconsin, township 35, range 11, near Crandon.
Ri(-e Lake, Oneida county, Wisconsin, township 36, range 7 east (Pocketbook Map of Oneida,Vilas, and range 4 of Iron counties. Wis- consin, E. S. Shepard, Rhinelander, Wisconsin, ( circa 1898]).
/>>!/ /tic* l.nkr, Oneida county, Wisconsin, township 36, range (> east (ibid.).
Ric< I.iil,-' . Vilas county. Wisconsin, township 41, range s east (ibid.).
It'lr, /.,//,-, .Vilas county. Wisconsin, township 39, range 10 east (ibid.).
Rlc<- Lai-* . Vilas county, Wisconsin, township 4.!. range 7 cast (ibid.).
S<-iitt, riinj Rif, 1. 1 1 1,;, on line between Forest and Vilas counties. It is drained by the Wisconsin river (ibid.).
LiHli R'"-> Liiki . N'ilas county. Wisconsin, between th,e triangle of lakes. Boulder lake. Fish Trap lake, and Trout lake. Ri<-< <•/;,/,• is connected witli Hig lake, which lies immediately west of Little Rice lake (Map of the Famous Hunting and Fishing Grounds embraced in the Lake Region of Michigan. Poole Bros., Chicago. IS!*.".).
Rif>' I.nk,. Polk county. Wisconsin. Alden township (Polk County Plat Book. L888).
Rif< LII/I-I . Polk county. Wisconsin, Milltown township (ibid.).
///'•, Ijil.-,. Polk county. Wisconsin. West Sweden township (ibid.).
-, iicitr 11, p. 131.
JKNKS1 WILD-RICE LAKES 1125
Hire Lake, Pane Bounty, Wisconsin, Albion township (Dane County Atlas, 1873).
R!c< La/,; . Barron county, Wisconsin, Stanford township (Barren County Plat Book).
(>l>iikii-a, or R'n-e Lai.;* (Wis. Hist. Colls., vol. i, p. 75).
Rice Lake, Ottertail county, Minnesota, Rush Lake township (Otter- tail County Plat-Book, 1884).
Rice- Lake, Ottertail county, Minnesota, Hohart township (ibid.).
Rice Luke, Ottertail county, Minnesota, Friberg township (ibid.).
Rice Lake in the city limits of Minneapolis (An Illustrated His- torical Atlas of the State of Minnesota, Chicago, 187-4).
Rice Creek, Washington county, Minnesota, Oneka township (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Scott county, Minnesota, Spring Lake township (ibid.).
Ilia- Lake, Carver county, Minnesota, Chandhassen township (ibid.).
Rio Lai;-, Carver county, Minnesota, between Waconia and Benton townships (ibid.).
Rice Creek, Blue Earth county, Minnesota, Sterling township, dis- charges into Maple river (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Blue Earth county, Minnesota, McPherson township
(ibid.).
liicr Luke, Le Sueur county, Minnesota, Sharon township (ibid.).
l!'>r, Luke, Rice county, Minnesota, Shieldsville township (ibid.). This lake may be named after the Honorable H. M. Rice, as is the count}7.
Rice Lake, Steele county. Minnesota, Havana township (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Waseca county, Minnesota, Janesville township (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Waseca county, Minnesota, on the border between Blooming, Grove, and Woodville townships (ibid.).
/i'n; Lake. Freeborn county. Minnesota, Riceland township (ibid.).
Rice Lake. Faribaiilt county, Minnesota, Dalcvan township (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Faribault county, Minnesota, Foster township (ibid.).
Rice Lake*. Stearns county, Minnesota. These are several large lakes in Eden, Lake, and adjoining townships (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Mille Lacs county, Minnesota, Greenbush township (ibid.).
!!'«;• < 'r, , k. Anoka county, Minnesota. It flows into the Mississippi river from the east (ibid.).
Rice Lake, Anoka county, Minnesota, between Bethel and Linwood townships (ibid.).
Ri<;: <',;,/,; Kanabec county, Minnesota. It discharges into the Snake river in the southeastern part of the county (ibid.).
Hie, L,ih; . Isanti county, Minnesota, Maple Ridge township, from which flows the Rice Creek just cited (ibid.).
A'/V, Lake, Todd county, Minnesota, Hartford township (ibid.).
Ri<-, Lai,-,, Morrison county, Minnesota (ibid.).
1126 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF Ul'l'ER LAKES [KTH.ASN.W
A'/V, I.,il;. \Vrightcounty. Minnesota. Franklin township (ibid.).
Hit/ R'ir, L,ik, . ('ass county. Minnesota (ibid.).
h'ir, L<il->, Hennepin county, Minnesota, Eden Prairie township (ibid.).
Wild Ri<-< /."/v . St. Loui.s county, Minnesota, northeast of Duluth (ibid.).
Rice Ln},'< . St. Louis county. Minnesota (ibid.).
A'/Vv L., a pond more than 1 mile long, at the north end of Little Lake Winnibigoshish ((.'ones, Pike, vol. i, note, p. 3:25).
Rice Lake, or Lake Ann, an expansion of Brown creek [Minnehaha| (ibid., note 4, p. 90).
Rice L., near Pokegama, Minnesota (ibid., note 54, p. 147).
This chapter presents over one hundred and sixty places which have borne a name synonymous with wild rice. Of these some few are doubtless duplicates, though great care has been exercised to avoid such.1
When it is called to mind how the North American Indians and those following them were led to name a certain place by its charac- teristic product, a better perspective is obtained for viewing the importance of wild rice as a food-supply during the period of aborig- inal production.
After a cursory comparative study it is believed that more geo- graphic names have been derived from wild rice in this relatively small section of North America than from any other natural vegetal product throughout the entire continent.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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See also V. S. Geog. and Geol. Surv. of the Territories (Hayden), 9th annual report, ix7:>.
AHMSTRONG, Perry A. The Sauks and the Black Hawk war, with biographical sketches, etc. Springfield, 111., 188".
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ATSTIN, Amory. Eice; its cultivation, production, and distribution in the United Statesand foreign countries. With a chapter on the rice soils of S. Carolina, by Milton Whitney. Washington, 1803.
In U. S. Dept. of Agric., D!v. of Slat.. Misc. SIT., 6.
iThe material for this chapter has been collected from books. HIM pv and utilises. II is often impos- sible to locate the places uientioneil in the 1'nst class of sources. Old maps are not d"tailed or authentic enough for strict accuracy. The counties of northern Wisconsin and Minnesota have1 not heen surveyed so thai accurate county atlases may be made, while in all of the States which grow wild rice few aliases have l.crn made. Inasmuch as it is the smaller lakes and ponds which bear wild rice irost abundantly, then- are many bodies of water locally bearing a name for wild rice which the present maps do not show.
JENKS1 BIBLIOGRAPHY 1127
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[Not to be implicitly depended on us a true narrator of the Indian.]
' Later Bishop Buraga. He spent about a half century among the Wisconsin Indians.
1128 WILD RICE GATHEKKKS OF UPPER LAKKS [ETH.ANx.19
Cu-i i\. George. Illustrations of tin- manners, customs, and condition of the North American Indians with letters and notes written during eiirht years .if travel and adventure . . . with . . . engravings from the author's original paintings. 10th ed. Loiicliui. IStiti. 1' vols.
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Canada . . . London, 1763.
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— . Traditional history and characteristic sketches of the Ojibway nation. London, 1850.
COPES, Elliott (ed.). The expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike to headwaters of the Mississippi river, during the years tS()5-<>-7. Newed., now first reprinted in full from the original of 1810, with copious, critical commentary, memoir of Pike, new map and other illustrations, and complete index. New York, 1895, 3 vols.
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the sources of the Missouri river, thence across the Rocky mountains and (\< >wn the Columbia river to the Pacific ocean, performed during the years 1804-5-ti. hy order of the government of the United States. A new edition . . . from the only authorized edition of 1814 . . . maps and other illustrations, and com] ilete index. Xew York, 1893, 4 vols.
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Cot'LTEB, John M. Manual of the phanerogams and pteridophytes of western Texas. //; r s. liept. of A.Lrrir,. J)iv. of Botany, Contributions from ihe f. s. Xutioiml Herbarium, vol. ii, number :i. p. ."ill. Washington. May 10, 189-1. [Short <leM-ription.]
— . Upon a collection of plants made by Mr (i. ( '. Xealley, in the region of the Rio Grande, in Texas, from ISra/os Santiago to !•'.! Paso county. In Di-pt. of Auric., liiv.of Hot., r. S.Nat. Herb. Coin r.. vol. l.pp.^'.i 86,
DABLON, Claude, /,'./•. /'in. Mission du Canada, relation inedites de la Nouvelle- France 1672-1679, pour faire suite aux aticiennes relations, .'.vec deux cartes Ljr"Lrra]ihii|ues. Paris, ISlil. '2 vols.
mi- i» also found under title: Relation de ee .jui .s'e>t paW< ill- plni, reinaniua: missions.
DARLINOTON, William, .17. /'. Agricultural botany and enumeration and description of useful plants. New York, 1847.
— . Flora Cestrica: An attempt to enumerate and describe the flowering and lilicoid plants of Chester county, Pennsylvania. West Chester, Pennsylvania, 1837.
JENKS] BIBLIOGRAPHY 1129
DICKSON, Robert, and Louis Grignon. Dickson anil Grignon papers, 1812-1815. In Wis. Hist. Colls., vol. xi, pp. 271-315.
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DCCATEL, J. J. A fortnight among the Chippewas of Lake Superior.
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ELLET, Elizabeth Fries, .Vn. Summer rambles in the West. New York, 1853.
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FLINT, Charles L. Grasses and forage plants; a practical treatise comprising their natural history. [III.] Rev. ed. Boston, 1888.
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HENNEPIN, Louis. Nouvelle decouverte d'un trt>s grand pays situe1 dans I'Ame'rique, entre le Nouveau Mexique, et La Mer Glaciale. Avec les cartes & les figures neceffaires. Utrecht, 1697.
HENRY, Alexander. Travels and adventures in Canada and the Indian territories between the years 1760 and 1776. New York, 1809.
HIND, Henry Youle. Narrative of the Canadian Red river exploring expedition of 1857, and of the Assinniboine and Saskatchewan exploring expedition of 1858. [111.] London, 1860, 2 vols.
HOFFMAN, Walter James, M. D. The Menomini Indians.
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HUNTER, John Dunn. Memoirs of a captivity among the Indians of North America, from childhood to the age of 19. Descriptive of their manners and customs. To which is added some account of the soil, climate, and vegetable productions of the territory westward of the Mississippi. [3d ed., with additions.] London, 1824.
1130 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH.ANN.W
INDIAN AFFAIRS, AXNTAI. REPORT OK THE COMMISSIONER OF.
From OH- formation of tin- (iovernment up to and including the year 1835 reports on Indian allnirs were not printed in separate volumes. The Indians were controlled by u division of the War Itepartmeiit unii! 1K;-J. when the division wns made a bureau. Previous to 1836 the reports may be found only in Senate and House Documents, and in American State Papers, Indian Afluirs (2 vols.), until 1S-J7.
JAIIRESBEHICHT tiber die Fortschritte der Agrikulturchemie; fiinfter Jahrgang, 1862-
1863. JONES, Peter, Rer. Life and Journals of Kah-ke-wa-quo-na-by: (Rev. Peter Jones),
U'i'sleyan missionary. Toronto, 1860.
KEATING, William. Narrative of an expedition to the source of St Peters river [Minne- sota river], Lake Winnepeek, Lake of the Woods, etc., performed in the year 1823, under the command of Stephen H. Long. Philadelphia, 1824, 2 vols. [Compiled from notes of Messrs Long, Say, Keating, and others.]
KINZIE, John H., Mrs. Wau-Bun, the early day in the Northwest. [111.] New York, 1856.
KOHL, Johann Georg. Kitchi-Gami, wanderings round Lake Superior. London,
1860. . Travels in Canada and through the states of New York and Pennsylvania.
Translated by Mrs Percy Sinnett. London, 1861, 2 vols. in 1.
KRAUTBAUER, F. X., Bishop. Short sketch of the history of the Menominee Indians of Wisconsin and the Catholic missions among them. Philadelphia, October, 1887.
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LA HARPK, Bernard de. Journal historique de Pe'tablissernent des Francaise a la Louisiane. Paris, 1831.
LOCKWOOD, James H. Early times and events in Wisconsin.
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North American Indians, [with] a vocabulary of the Chippeway and other Indian
languages. London, 1791.
1.0X11. Stephen H. Narrative . . . (See KEATING.)
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McKENNEY, Thomas L. Memoirs, official and personal; with sketches of travels :i M mug the northern and southern Indians; and descriptions of scenes along the western borders. New York, 1846, 2 vols. in 1.
. Sketches of a tour of the lakes, of the character and customs of the Chippe- way Indians; also a vocabulary of the Algic, or Chippeway language. [111.] Baltimore, 1827.
MAC CAITLEY, Clay. The Seminole Indians of Florida.
In Fifth Annual Rep. Bureau of Ethnology, 1883-84, pp. 469-531.
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MACMILLAN, Conway. The metaspermse of the Minnesota valley. A list of the higher seed-producing plants indigenous to the drainage basin of the Minnesota river.
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MALLKKY, Garrick. On the pictographs of the North American Indians. In Fourth Annual Rep. Bureau of Ethnology, pp. 13-254, 1882-83.
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MERRELL, Henry. Winnebago dictionary.
(A manuscript list of Winnebago words and their English equivalents, as prepared for personal use by Mr Merrell, a Portage trader. A copy of the manuscript is in the library of the Wisconsin Historical Society.)
MOOXEY, James. The Siouan tribes of the East (Bulletin). Washington, 1894; 100 p. Bulletin 22 of the Bureau of Ethnology.
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113'J WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH. ANN. 19
R.MHSSON, Peter Ksprit. Voyages, . . . Itfingan account <>i his travels and experi- ences aniont: the North American Indians from Iti5i' in H1S4. Witli historical illustrations and an introduction by Gideon 1). Scull, lioslon, 1SS5. Publication i>f (lie I'rini-r Society (Hi).
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at/ emigrant officer. London, 1836. TRAILL, Catherine Parr. Canadian Crusoes. A tale of the Rice lake plains.
Edited by Agnes Strickland. 2d ed. London, 1862. TRELEASE, William. Preliminary list of Wisconsin parasitic fungi.
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LIST OF CORRESPONDENTS
ASH, Benjamin C., Lower Brule, South Dakota, February 24,1899 (agent of Lower
Brule agency, South Dakota).
BARTON, N. W., Baltimore, Maryland (about December 10, 1898) . BE<;<;, Magnus, Fort Frances, Ontario, Canada, January 17, 1899 (agent of the
Coucheeching agency, Ontario, Canada, about Rainy lake) . BESSEY, Charles E., Lincoln, Nebraska, December !>, 1898. BEYER, ( ieoriie E., New ( h'leans, Louisiana, Decemlier 19, ISiis.
ER, George H., Fort Yates, North Dakota, November 15,1898 (agent of
Standing Ruck Agency, North Dakota).
1!> KTII, IT 2—01 37
1134 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH. A.NN. 19
HISIIOP, W. 11., Newark. Delaware, December 12, 1898.
r.i.ANKixsmi', J. W.. Bozeman. .Montana. I >eceml>er 12, 1898.
]',K \\sos, Mel\ in A..<;rand Forks, North Dakota, December 10, 1898.
BRAY, William L., Austin. Texas. Deccmlier i;{. 1898.
CAMIMIEU., .John ('., At liens, Georgia, April 1.'!, 1899.
CLAIM-, William K. (Major, I'.S. A. ), Pine Kklge, South Dakota, November 12, 1898
(agentof Pine Ridge Agency, South Dakota). ClJlITON.G. !'., I'l-bana, Illinois. May 3,1899.
Corns, Klliott (M. D.), Washington, District of Columbia, February 10, 1S1I9. ( 'HAN-HALL, C. S., Fort Collins, Colorado, December 12, 1898. CrRRiE BROTHERS, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, May 6, 1899. DAVY.J. Burtt, Berkeley. California. DccemlK-r 6, 1898. Donsox, W. K., Ann Arbor, Michigan, Novemlnr 12, 1898. KVANS, A. Grant, Muscogee, Indian Territory, April 25, 1899. F.VAXS, Alexander W., New Haven, Connecticut, January 3, 1899. FERXAI.D, M. L., Cambridge, Massachusetts, December 12, 16, 1898. (i \UMAN, H., Lexington, Kentucky, December 17, 1898. GEORCK, D. H., Keghena, Wisconsin, December 8, 1898 (agent of Green Bay agency,
Wisconsin). GETCHEU., Fred O., Fort Totten, North Dakota, November 10, 1898 (agent of Devils
Lake agency, North Dakota). GHEEX, Stephen, Nett Lake, Minnesota, November 15, 1898 (Government farmer,
Nett Lake reservation, Minnesota).
GILFILLAN, J. A., ' White Earth, Minnesota, May 4, 1896. GOODRICH, D. L., Hampton, Virginia, December 10, 1898. GRANT, A., I., Plymouth, New Hampshire, December 22, 1898. HARDING, John W., Greenwood, South Dakota, November 10, 1898 (agentof Yankton
agency, South Dakota).
HARVEY, F.Z., Orono, Maine, December 9, 1898. HENDERSON, L. F., Moscow, Idaho, December 11, 1898. HILLMAX, F. H., Reno, Nevada, Decemlier 12, 1898. HITCHCOCK, A. S., Manhattan, Kansas, April 24, 1899. HOLFERTY, G. M., Cincinnati, Ohio, April 17, 1899. HOWARD, O., Salt Lake City, Utah, December 13, 1898. jEsrp, Henry G., Hanover, New Hampshire, December 13, 1898. JOHN-SON, Nathan P., Sisseton agency, South Dakota, November 19,1898 (agent of
Sisseton agency, South Dakota).
JONES, L. R., Burlington, Vermont, December 27, 1898. JOXES, Marcus K., Salt Lake City, Utah, December 23, 1898. LAKE, E. H., Corvallis, Oregon, December 30, 1898. LANCM.OIS, A. B., St. Martiusville, Louisiana, November 21, 1898. McB.ux, Samuel, Knoxville, Tennessee, December 9, 1898.
McCiiESNEY, Charles K., Rosebud, South Dakota, November 12, 1898 (agentof Rose- bud "agency, South Dakota).
MC.VKII.I., Jerome, Fayetteville, Arkansas, DecemluT 21, 1898. MAC i ARI.AXK, John M., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, December 12, 1898. MACKAY, A. H., Halifax, Nova Scotia, May 1, 1899. MA< -LOSE IE, G., Princeton, New Jersey, December 15, 1898. MAKKLE, J. A., Birtle, Manitoba, Canada, November 21, 1898 (Indian agent of
Western Manitoba, Canada). MARTINEAU, H., Portage la I'rairie, Manitoba, Canada, November 18, 1898 (Indian
agent in the Lake Manitoba Indian inspectorate). MATIIEWS, C. W., Lexington, Kentucky, December 15, 1898.
1 Kindness of Mr Gardner P. Stickney, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
•"»*«] CORRESPONDENTS 1135
MATHUMCHA, J., Tokyo, Japan, December 6, 1898 (professor of botany at the
Imperial University).
MAY, L. I,., & Co., St. Paul, Minnesota, May 10, 1899. MILL, P. H., Auburn, Alabama, May 1, 1899. MOORE, C. W.,1 Chetek, Wisconsin, April 29, 1896. MOTHER, D. M., Bloomington, Indiana, December 26, 1898. MOTZFELDT, J. , Pelican Lake, Wisconsin, December 3, 1898. Mr Motzfeldt has lived
about forty years in the above district. NELSON, Aven, l^aramie, Wyoming, December 12, 1898. NEWCOMBE, F. C., Ann Arbor, Michigan, December 9, 1898. OPPEL, Charles C.,1 Tower, Minnesota, May 4, 1896. PADDOCK, L. A., Grass Lake, Illinois, January 20, 1899. Mr Paddock has lived
sixty years on Grass lake, where there are 2,000 acres of Zizania aquatint. PATTERSON, Roger, Odanah, Wisconsin, November 23, 1898 (Government farmer,
Bad River reservation, Wisconsin). PHALON, Peter, Cloquet, Wisconsin, December 27, 1898 (Government farmer, Fond
du Lac reservation, Wisconsin). PITHER, Robert J. N., Rat Portage, Ontario, Canada, Decembers, 1898. Mr Pither
w as in the Hudson Bay Company twenty-five years and Indian agent in the
Coucheeching Agency district of Ontario twenty-five years. POKAGON, Simon (Chief), Hartford, Michigan, November 10 and 16, 1898. Simon
Pokagon was the last chief of the Potawatoini Indians. He died at his home
in Hartford January 27, 1899.
RAHALEV, Francis, Boulder, Colorado, December 9, 1898. REID, James G., Cheyenne River agency, South Dakota, November 11, 1898 (agent
of Cheyenne River agency, South Dakota) . RICHARDS, Thomas, Elbowoods, North Dakota, November 17, 1898 (agent of Fort
Berthold agency) . RODMAN, N. D., Reserve, Wisconsin, November 11, 1898, and February 14, March 1,
1899 (Government farmer, Lac Courte Oreilles reservation, Wisconsin). ROLFS, P. H., Lake City, Florida, December 10 and 19, 1898. RUMSEV, W. E., Morgantown, West Virginia, December 17, 1898. S.U-NDERS, D. W., Brookings, South Dakota, January 4, 1899. SCRIBNER, F. Larnson-, Washington, District of Columbia, April 25, 1899. SIIIMEK, B., Iowa City, Iowa, December 7, 1898. STEPHENS, J. H., Crow Creek, South Dakota, November 16, 1898 (agent of Crow
Creek agency, South Dakota). STUNTZ, A. C., Monroe, Wisconsin, November 24, 1898. Mr Stuntz was among the
Ojibwa Indians in northern Wisconsin from the year 1848 until 1882. SUTHERLAND, John H., White Earth, Minnesota, December 14, 1898 (agent of White
Earth agency, Minnesota).
TOI-RNEY, J. W., Tucson, Arizona, December 7, 1898. TRACY, S. M., Agricultural College P. O., Mississippi, December 13, 1898. TUKNER, James G. (M. D. ), L'Anse, Michigan, December 7, 1898 (agent of the
Mackinac agency, Michigan).
TfTTLE, A. H., Charlottesville, Virginia, November 20, 1898, and January 19, 1899. WHEELER, C. F., Lansing, Michigan, December 14, 1898. WILLIAMSON, John P. (Reverend), Greenwood, South Dakota, November 30, 1898,
and January 21, 1899. Mr Williamson and his father before him have been
lifelong missionaries to the Dakota Indians. WILSON-, H. II, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, February 15, 1899. • WOOTOX, E. O., Mesilla Park, New Mexico, December 22, 1898.
i Kindness of Mr Gardner P. Stickupy, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
1136 WILD RICE GATHERERS OF UPPER LAKES [ETH. ASS. 19
CHRONOLOGIC LIST OF MAPS.
1670-71. Map publish.-.! in Relations des .Tesnites ( 1670-71 ),Dablon. Before 1716. Map of North America, Herman Moll. [1673.] Far simile de la Carte <lu Pen- Marijuette.
1687. AmphissiniH' Regions Mississippi . . . after Hennepin.
1688. Une partie de la Carte oe I.' Anieric|iie Septentrionale en L'Annee 1688, par
J.Baptiste Louis Franquentin IIYDK DC Roy A Quebec en Canada. (Copy
made by I. A. Lapliam from Chicago Historical Collection, which was
destroyed by the Chicago fire in 1871. ) 1718. Le Canada, ou Nouvelle-France . . . (Paris).
1720. A New Map of the North Parts of America claimed by France, H. Moll. 1720. Moll's America, Herman Moll. 1730 (circa). America Septentrionalis, G. De L'Isle. [1740 to 1750.] America, John Bowles & Son (London). [1746.] Amerique Septentrionale, D'Arville. 1750. Amerique Septentrionale, L. Sr Robert De Vaugondy. 1750 (circa). A Map of the British Plantations on the Continent of North America,
Henry Overton. 1755. Nieuwe Kaart van de Grootbrittanische Volkplantingen in Noord America,
Isaak Tirion.
1755. Canada Louisiane et Terres Angloises, Le Sr D'Anville. 1776-78. Map with Carver's Travels. [1778]. A New Map of the Western Parts of Virginia, Pennsylvania . . . Tho.
Hutching. 1791. Sketch of the Western Countries of Canada, 1791, with J. Long's Voyages and
Travels, etc. (we Bibliography).
[1795]. A Map of the Western Part of the Territories belonging to the United States. 1799. States of America, J. Russell. 1796-1802. [Map of New Kng., New York, New Jersey, Penn., and parts of Canada.]
London, A. Arrowsmith, Jan. 1, 1796. Additions, 1802.
1804. Map of the United States, Abraham Bradley, Junr.
1805. Map of the State of Ohio, Rufus Putnam, Surveyor-General of the Unite<>
States.
1806. Lewis and Clarke's Map.
1816. Map of the United States, John Melish.
[1817]. United States of America, No. 55.
1820. Map of western end of Lake Superior, p. 105, in Schoolcraft's Summary o
an expedition to the sources of the Mississippi (see Schoolcraft, ii
Bibliography) . 1835. A Map of a portion of the Indian Country Lying Kast & West of Miss., fol
the Topographical Bureau. 1835. Reconnoissancc of the Minnay Sotor Watapah; or St Peters river [Minnesota
river] to its sources, by G. W. Featherstonhaugh, U. S. Geologist (one of
two maps accompanying Featherstonhaugh's Report of a Geological Kecon-
noissance, 1835).
1835. Map of the Surveyed Parts of Wisconsin Territory.
1836. Map of the Territory of Wisconsin, David H. Burr.
1836. Map of the Territories of Michigan and Oiiisconsin, John Farmer.
ls:;ti. The Tourist'^ Packet Map of Michigan, by J. H. Young; published by S.
Augustus Mitchell. [Philadelphia.]
is:;:. Topographical Map of Wisconsin Territory, Robert T. Lyttle, Surveyor-General- ls:;s. Map of the Settled Part of Wisconsin and Iowa, Augustus Mitchell.
JEXKS] MAPS 1137
1839. Map of Wiskonsin Territory compiled from public Surveys, Capt. T. J. Cram.
1843. Hydrographic'al Basis of the Upper Mississippi River from observations, etc,
J. N.Nichollet
1844. Map of Wiskonsan, Charles Doty and Francis Hudson. 1848. United States of America, Sherman and Smith, New York.
1848. Farmer's 4th Sheet or Map of Wisconsin, Iowa and Northern Part of Illinois,
John Farmer, Detroit.
1849. Map of the Territory of Minnesota, exhibiting route of the Expedition to the
Red river of the North in the Summer of 1849, Capt. John Pope.
1850. General Karte der Vereinigten Staaten von Nord-Arnerika, Albrecht Platt
(after T. Calvin Smith's New York Karten). 1850. The State of Wisconsin, I. A. Lapham, Milwaukee.
1856. Map of Southern Minn, and Part of Wisconsin, Harris, Cowles & Co., Boston.
1857. Railroad map of Wisconsin, Kufua Blanchard, Chicago.
1860. Sectional Map of the Surveyed Portion of Minn, and Northwestern Part of Wis.
1861. Map Supplement to Illustrated London News, June 1st, 1861, of the United
States of North America.
1862. Lloyd's New Map of United States, the Canadas, and New Brunswick. 1866. Blanchard's Map of the North Western States, Chicago.
1869. Blanchard's map of North Western States, Chicago. 1874. The Illustrated Historical Atlas of the State of Minnesota, 1874, Chicago. 1879. Department of Interior, General Land Office, State of Minnesota. 1892. Rand, McNally & Co.'s Sectional Map of Michigan, Chicago.
1892. Rand, McNally & Co.'s Sectional Map of Minnesota, Chicago.
1893. The Lake Region of Northern Wisconsin and Michigan, Ring, Fowle & Co.,
Milwaukee.
1894. Goodhue County Plat Book, 1894.
[1895]. Map of the Famous Hunting and Fishing Grounds embraced in the Lake
Region of Michigan and Wisconsin, Poole Bros., Chicago. 1896. The Railroad Map of Wisconsin, D. J. McKenzie, Railroad Commissioner.
INDEX TO PART 2
Pago
AALTC, see ALOSAKA. — , religious society at Walpi, source and
census of 623,637
ABIQUIU, site of ancient Josoge 611
ACO.MA or Akokaiobi, settlement of 589
— , an example of naturally fortified pu- eblo 641-042
ADAMS, on scientific synonym for wild
rice 1021
ADDIS, on magical numbers 848,849
AGRICULTURE, influence of, on pueblo
architecture 640,642-643
AGUACATECA method of forming numer- als above ten 905
— , number names of 863
AHAU SYMBOL, discovery concerning, by
Goodman 712
— , Goodman on 717
— , working table of 819
Aixo method of forming numbers above
ten 913
— , use of vigesimal system by 925
AIWAKOKWE CLAN, same as Asaclan 610
AKAL'MAN, number names of 874
AKOKAIOBI or Acoma, settlement of 589
— , home of Asa clan 610
ALA CLAN, mythic origin of 590-591
— , relations of, with Tctta 588-590
ALAGPILAC, number names of 867, 928
ALA-LENYA (HORN-FLUTE) CLAN, advent
of, at Walpi 585-586.590-594
— , ceremony of advent of, at Walpi .... 591-592
— GROOP, Ala clans of 583
— , Lefiya clans of 583
— SOCIETIES, probable origin of 626
ALCHEMY, stepping-stone to modern sci- ence 825-826
ALEJAXDRE, MARCELO, on Huastecan nu- meral system 894
ALGONQUIAN, influence of, on westward migration of Siouan stock 1043
— LANGUAGE, influenceof, on geographic nomenclature 1115
ALIEN RESIDENTS, influence of, on pueblo architecture 649-650
ALLEN, J. A., on American bison in Pied- mont area 1043
ALLIGATOR, effigy of, in Santa Rita mounds 680,684
ALLOUEZ, PERE CLAUDE, on Maskotin use of wild rice 1054
ALMACABALA, modern vestiges of 847-851
— , stepping stone to modern science . . . 825-826
ALOSAKA, Patun germ -god 595-396
Page ALSEA, amounts of wild rice harvested
by 1076
AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, reference
to (133
AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, on
Mayan inscriptions 700
AMERICAN Fun COMPANY, dependence
of, on wild rice 1103-1104
AMERICAN MUSEUM OP NATURAL HIS- TORY, on Mayan inscriptions.. 700
ANA WITA, chief of Pitka, mention of 597
— , on advent of clans at Walpi 585
— , Hopi Rain-cloud clan chief, reference
to 57»
ANCESTOR WORSHIP, in Snake dance . 965-966,
1008 ANIMAL EFFIGIES, in mounds at Santa
Rita 678 685
ANTELOPE ALTAR, characteristics of. ... 968
— , at Mishongnovi 966-969
-,at Walpi ggo
— CLAN, see TCUBIO CLAN.
— PRIESTS, part played by, in Antelope
and Snake dances 974-975
— , same as Tcilbwimpkia 623-634
— , in Walpi Snake dance 984-985
— and Snake dances 973-976
— SOCIETY, census of 825
— , kiva of, at Mishongnovi 906
ANU, HOPI ci. AX, reference to 583
ANZA, governor of New Mexico, refer- ence to on
APACHE, raids of, on Sobaipuri, etc 598
— . influence of, on Hopi removal from old
Walpi 580
— , on Patki migrations 597
— , on Tusayan migrations 626
ARCHITECTURE, pueblo, modifying influ-
onceson 640-644,646-648
ARMSTRONG. PERRY A., on meaning of
Saukand Fox tribal names 1050
AKKOWSMITII. A., on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature 1116,
1117,1131 — , on territory of '• Wild-rice Indians ".. 1042
ARTS, primitive, egoism reflected in 833
ASA (TANSY-MUSTARD) CLAN, advent of,
at Walpi 585 586
— or TCAKWAINA CLAXS, migrations and census of 610-613
— GROUP, component clans of 584
ASH-BARK WIGWAM, see List of illustra- tions ioi7
ASPEHGII.L, importance of, in Snake cer- emonies 974
1139
1140
INDEX
]ETII. ANN. la
Page A88INIBOIN, tribal history, migrations,
and settlement of 1054-1055
— , meaning of tribal name of 1 054
— , relations between, and Saulteaux 1040
— sow wild rice 1057
— consume wild rice 1055
ASTROLOGY, stepping-stone to modern
science 825-826
ATOKO CLAN, with the Patun clan ">!'">
ATWATEH, CALEB, on duck in Winnipeg
river 1098
— , on synonym for Menomini Indians . . . 1048
— , on wild rice in Wisconsin river 1034
— , on Winnebago storing food 1071. 1072
AUGMENTATION, law of, in primitive
numbers.... 839-S42
AUSTIN, AMORY, on composition of white
rice 1082
Aw ATA CLAN, same as Pakab clans 608-609
AWATOBI, advent of Patun clans at 595
— , destruction of, referred to 586
— , founded by Pakab- Awata clans 609
— , probable home of Pakab clans ' 608
A/TEC or Nahuatl method of forming
numerals above ten 882-885
BADGER CLAN, see HONAXI CLAN.
BAKAIHI, number names of 877
BANCROFT, HUBERT H.. on Huavean num- bers 918
— , on meaning of Mayan number names. 876
— , on migrations of Tanoan lill
BANDELIER, on foundation of Josoge till
BANDOLIERS, used by priests in Snake
ceremonies 971,972
BARAGA, FREDERIC, on meaning of
Ojibwa word " manominikewin " 1061
— , on Ojibwa wild-rice moon 1089
BARCENA. ALONSO, on Tabo numeration. 838
BARLEY, chemical composition of 1082
BARRATT, JOSEPH, on meaning of
"min" , 1024
BAHTOX, N. W., on wild rice in Maryland . 1030 BASALEXQUE, DIEGO, on Tarasco num-
berwords 880
BEAR CLAN, see HONAU CLAN.
— , same as Ke clan 615,618
— , associated with Snake-Antelope so- cieties at Walpi 624
BEEK, dried, chemical composition of 10S2
BELL. CHAS. N., 0:1 influence of wild rice
on geographic nomenclature 1121
BELMAR, FRANCISCO, on Trike numerals. 908
— , on Mazateca method of counting 879
— , on formation of Mazateca numbers
above ten 888-889
— , on Zapotecan number names 872
BKI/TKAML J. C., on Dakota wild-rice
moon 10!* J
— , on influence of wild rice on geo- graphic nomenclature 1121,1122
— , on population of Fox 1051
BELTHAN, on Maya numerals 897
— , on Maya numerals above ten 890-893
BE.NTIIAM. on wild rice in eastern Russia. 1037
— AND HOOKER, on scientific synonym forwildrice 1021
Page BEREXIIT, Dr CARL HERMANN, on Maya
numeral system M.12
BEititA. < >HO/,CO v., on origin of Mexican
number names ^T.".
BKSSEY. CHARLES E., on wild rice in Ne- braska 1031
— AND WEHER, on wild rice in Nebraska 1022
BETOYA, number names of *77
BEYER, GEO. E., on wild rice in Louisi- ana 1030
BIDULK. JAMES \V., on duck in Green bay 1093
— , on wild rice eaten with corn and fish 1084
BINARY CONCEPT, among primitive peo- ple 83«-838
Hi NARY-TERNARY system, among primi- tive people S42.M; -!•-
Hi it< ii KAIIK HOXES, "mococks." used for storing and carrying wild rice . 1066, 1072
— CANOE, used in wild rice harvest 1017,
1056-1(1711
— FANS, used in winnowing wild rice 1071
AMI MATTING WIGWAM, .SVC LIST OF ILLUST HAT IONS 1017
— WINNOWING TRAY for wild rice 1017,
1070-1071 BIHI> EFFIGIES, at Mishouguovi Cakwal-
eflya altar 992
— , at Mishongnovi Flute altar 9M
— , at Shipaulovi altar 995
BIRDS, destructive to wild rice 1027
HISIIOP. W. H, on wild rice in Delaware.. 1029 BISON, influence of, on modern Dakota
migrations 1044
— , possible influence of, on early Siouan
migrations 1043
BLACKHIRD, ANDREW J., on meaning
and use of "min" 1024
BLAIR, Miss EMMA HELEN, authority on
writings of Jesuites 111.3
BI.AXKINSHII', J. W., on absence of wild
rice in Montana 1031
BLUE FLUTE ICAKWALENYA), ALTA, at
Mishongnovi 989
BOHGIAX CODEX, cited 861
— . Nahuatlau numbers from 944-945
BOTUHIXI, LORENZO BENADUCI, on Mexi- can calendar system 935
l'.uri;rBT, HENRY, on Indian population
in 17W nos
BoritGEois, ENRIQUE, on Quekchinn
numerals 901-903
BIIYD, GEORGE, on trading posts in the
wild-rice fields not
BOWLES, JOHN, AND SON, map by, locates
Maskotin 1164
BHAXNOX, MELVIN A., on wild rice In
North Dakota 1031
HiiAssF.ru. HE BouiiiiofHG, on formation
of Miiya number names 866
— , on Kicho numerals KlVl, S95-899
— , on Maya methods of computation . . . 933
— , on Maya numeral system 894
BRAY, WILLIAM M., on wild rice in
Texas 1032
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1141
Pago
BRESSANY, MAUTIN, ontyingwild rice... 1068 — , wild rice harvesting illustration, ref- erence to 1057
BuiiiKi. numeralsof 919
BHI.NTON, Dr D. G., on Alagiiilac num-
bernaraes 867
— , on archaic form of Maya day names. 884
— , on Cakchikel numerals 900
— , on early Central American day
names.. 80S
— , on formula "unity of mind" S27
— , on interpretation of Ik 74ti
— , on Maya numeral system WH.MH
— , on Maya time periods 715
— , on Rama numerals 918
— , on time of adoption of thirteen a* group
order _. 853
— , translation by, quoted fromGoodinan. 717
— , on Tzental number seven 951
— . on Uto-Aztecan family 866
—, on Xincan number names 881
BRITTON, Dr N. L., on fossil Zizania in
New Jersey. 1031
BROOK TROUT, whole, chemical composi- tion of 1081
BROWN, SAMUEL R., on birds destructive
tcwildrice 1(127
— , on Menomini gathering wild rice . 1062
— , on popular synomyn for wild rice 1023
— , on tying wild rice 1058
— , on wild-rice field in Wisconsin 1033
BRUNCA, numeralsof 919
BRUNSON, ALFRED, on relative value to Ojibwa of Government annuity and
natural products 1096-1097
BRYANT, wild rice harvesting illustra- tions, reference to 1057
BUCHANAN, JAMES, on synonym for Me- nomini 1048
BUELNA, EUSTAQUIO, on Cahita number
names 867
— , on Cahita numerals 908
But.i OK BUTTERFLY CLAN, same as Ho-
nani or Badger clan 607
— , advent of, at Walpi 585
BUREAU OP AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, Eighth Annual Report of, cited on Tu-
sayan architecture ">7'.i
BUHGOA, on Huave numbers 918
BURK. DAVIII H., on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature . . 1121, 1122 BUSIINKLL. D. P., on relative value to Ojibwa of wild rice and Government
annuity 1036
BUTLKR, JAMKS D., on wild rice in vicin- ity of Madison, Wisconsin 1038
BUTTERFLIES, depicted on Walpi Snake
altar 883
BUTTERFLY CLAN, see BI:LI CLAN.
CABECAR, number names of 882
-, numbers of 931
CACHE, for wild rice 1071-1072
CACTUS CLAN, see UcC.
CADILLAC, on Menomiui 1107
CAHITA, number names of 867,922.928
— met hod of counting 879
— numliers above ten 908
OAHUII.LO, formation of number u:um-s in...
Page
879
— , number names of .Hiis^Tii
— , numbers of 929
OAKCIIIQUEL method of forming num- bers above ten _ 899-901
— , number namesof 8K2.8G3
C'AKWABAiYAKi.siteof old Pibapueblo. . 601 CAKWAI.KNYA. religious society at Walpi, source of 1123
— ALTAR, same as Blue Flute altar 889
— , at Mishongnovi, described 991-992
— SOCIETY, personnel of iiiiii
CAI.AKO TAK A, masks of, reference to. . . 012 "CALENDAR ROUND" SYMBOL, discov- ery concerning, by Goodman 712
CALENDAR ROUNDS, Mayan, working
tables of 818
— , systems of, of different Central Ameri- can tribes shown to be identical 8(16-812
— , Mayan (593-819
—.object of study of 700-701
CALIFORNIA PAUITK, numbers of !(£! '.Mi
CAMPBELL, JOHN P., on wild rice in
Georgia 1029
CANADA, wild rice in 1037
CANOE, birch bark, used in wild rice har- vest lost; .1(17(1
CANYON DE CHELLY, home of Asa clan.. 610
CAPOTE UTE, number names of 870.929
CARDINAL POINTS, importance of, in
Snake ceremonies 972, 974
— , recognition of, in Flute ceremonies. 10TO, 1004
CAREY, on synonym for Menomini 1048
CAHIB method of forming numerals... . 914 GARNI FF, WILLIAM, on wild rice in Lake
Huron 1037
— , on use of wild rice by white? in On- tario 1101
CARREHi,GEMELLi,on Mexican calendar
system 935
CAUHIZO, numeralsof 919
CAHTEPARTICULIEKE DU FLEUVE SAINT
Louis, on synonym for Menomini 1048
CARTE DE LA LOUISIANE ET DC COURS
DC MI881S8I PI, on location of Maskotin. 1053 Cutus, PAUL, on Chinese mythic num- bers 847
CARVER. JONATHAN, on Dakota curing
wild rice 1065
— , on Dakota property-right in wild rice. 1073
— , on Dakota storing wild rice 1072. 1088
— , on Dakota tying wild rice... 1058-1059
— ,on duck in Wisconsin Irtit. 1098
— ,on future value of wild rice to whites. 1101
— ,on location of Sank 1051
- , on Minnesota river 1035
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1116
— , on Dakota thrashing wild rice by tread- ing or rubbing 1069
— , on time Dakota first possessed horses. 1044
— ,on wild-rice feast 1092
— ,on wild rice in Fox river 1034
CASTANEDA, on location of Tusayan 598
CATERPILLARS. dostructmn of wild rice by 1027.1100
1142
INDEX
[ETH. ANX. 19
Page CATLIX, OEOKOE, on Dakota gathering
wild rice !<«.'
— . wild rice harvesting illustration, refer- ence to 1057
CEIIAR-BARK BAGS, for storing wild rice. 1072 CELEDON, RAFAEL, on Carib numerals... 814 CENTRAL AMERICA, ruins of , inscriptions
of W«
CEREMONIAL DAYS, of the Flute rite at
Mishongnovi 988-993
CHAMBERLAIN. ALEXANDER P., on Mis-
sissagua thrashing wild rice by flailing. 1069
— , on Mississagua wild-rice foods 1083
— , on Mississagna gathering wild rice . . . 1063 — ,on Mississagua curine wild rice... 1065.1066 — ,on threshing wild rice in deer-skin
lined hole 1088
CHAXABAL method of forming numbers
above ten 908
— .number names of - 86£'
CHARENCEY, LA COMTE DE, on Aztec
number names 878-879
— , on Chiapanecan number names 874
— , on Cbichimecan word four 87C
— , on formation of Mayan number names. 865
— , on Tzotzil number names 863
— , on Mame numerals 903-904
— , on Mixtec number names ?72
— , on Opata and Cahita number names. . 867
— , on Othomi number names 873
— , on Qu'iehe' number names 864
— , on Quekhi numerals 901-{MI2
— , on Sonoran number names 868
— , on Shoshone number names 869,870
— , on Tarahumari numbers 923
CHAKLEVOIX, P. DK, on Menomini 1107
— , on Menomini use of wild rice 1048
— , on nature of Green bay area 1112
CHAVERO, ALFREDO, on Mexican and
Hindu counting 875-876
— , on Nahuatlan counting 878
CHEMEHL'EVI, numl>er names of 870
gra.(R8,wg
CHIAPANEC. number names of 874. x7s
CHIAPAS, ruins of, inscriptions of KIK!
CmnciiA method of forming numbers .. 018 CHICAGO THIHUNK, wild rice harvesting
illustration, published in 11157
CHILAN BAI.AM. book of. on value of
aliaus in Maya calendar system 71?
ClIIPPEWA. we O.IIIIWA.
CHIPPEWAY HIVKH, wild rice In 1034
CHOCHA, or Chuchon, number names of. 872 CHOCO (Panama) method of forming
numbers 917
CHOL. number names of 862
— method of forming numbers above
ten 906
CHONTAL, nnmlK-r names of 862
CHRONOLOGY, MAYAN, Goodman's sys- tem of 792-8(10
CHUCHON or Chocha. number names of. 872, 930 fur EN symbol, discovery concerning, by
Goodman 711
CM IHK method of forming numbers
above ten 905
-, number names of 863,880
Page CHUMAYEL, Chronicle of, on value of ahau
in Maya calendar system 717
('Hum HILL. OWNSIIAM, on Mexican cal- endar system 935
CIIUH.A. <-ity of 650
Ci M<>, HOIM r ii IF. p. on advent of clans at
Walpi 585
CIPACTLI. A/tfrnn mythic animal, sym- bolizing the earth 684
CIPIAS, mention of 598
CITIES, STATIONS, etc., named from wild
rice 1117-1118
CIVILIZATION, influence of protection of ,
on Pueblo architecture IH2
C'IWANU, HOPI CLAN, reference to 583
CLANS, influence of, on Pueblo architec- ture 646-648
— , determination of (Kl u.v;
— , of Walpi and Sichumovi 582-584
— WORSHIP, germs of, in Snake and Flute
societies 1006
CLAVICEPS PURPUREA, destructive to
wild rice 1027
CLAVICEPS SP., destructive to wild rice . 1027 CLAVIGERO, FRANCISCO JAVIER, on Ma- yan feast days at opening of century . . 675
— , on Mexican calendar system UTi
— , on Mexican division of year '.'.V>
— , on Mexican method of counting 921)
— ,on Nahuatl method of counting large
numbers - 884
CLINTON, G. P., on wild rice in Illinois. .. litilt
CLOUD CLAN same as OkuwaiS clan 615.621
— , see PATKI CLAN.
CODICES, numeral symbols in 812-819
COLLINS, J. FIIANKI.IN, on wild rice in
Rhode Island 1032
COLORS employed in Santa Rita wall
painting 669-670
COM ANCHE, influence of, on Pueblo archi- tecture.. 641
—, number names of 870.929
COMPUTATION, methods of number 932-933
CON A NT, L. L.. on Australian counting.. . 877
— , on Australian number concepts 833,837
— , on Cahuillo number names 868
— , on Cora number names 867
— , on geographic extent of vigesimal
system 924,925
— , on Mosquito number names 881
— , on origin and spread of vigesimal sys- tem 926
— , on Othomian number names 873
— , on primitive counting 875
— , on Totonaca numerals 911
— , on Tschukschi numerals 913
('ONNF.CTICUT BuAHD OF AGRICULTURE
AND EXPERIMENT STATION, report of, on composition of cereals and fruits . .. 1081-
1082
CONSUMPTION of wild rice 1080-1088
Coos, amounts of wild rice harvested by . 1076
— , standard of life of 1079
COPAN, inscriptions of 776-7K8
—.initial series of 801-808
COPWAY.GEOHGF.. on duck in Ontario ... 1098 CORA, meaning of number names of 878
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1143
Page
CORA, number names of 8«7,»30
CORDOVA, P. Fit. JUAN de, on Zapotec
counting by moons 954
— . on Zapotec numerals 872,887
CORN, of Antelope altar 968
— , of Macileiiya altar 989
— , at Mishongnovi Cakwalenya altar 992
— , prominent in Flute ceremony 10U5
— CLAN, same as Kolon clan 615-618
— KERNELMOSAic.atMishongnovialtar. 993
— [MAIZE], chemical composition of 1081
— , green sweet, chemical composition of. . 1081
— MEAL.atHopialtars. 983, 991, 99--', 999, 1001, 1(103
— , chemical composition of 1081
— , importance of, in Antelope and Snake
dance 974,975,876
— , STACK (shock ) of, at Walpi Flute altar. 1001
CORONADO at Cibola 650
— , expedition of 598
— , on location of Tucano.. 599
CORTESIAN CODICES, cited 817
COTOKIXUNWC, statuette of, at Oraibi
Flute altar.. 993
COTTON'S RANCH, same as Pueblo Ganado 604
— ,site of old Wukopakabi 614
COUES, DR ELLIOTT, on description of
wild-rice plant 1026
— , reference to translation of Diario 599
— , (Ed.), on dependence of fur traders
on wild rice 1101-11(8
— , (Ed.), on influence of wild rice on geo- graphic nomenclature 1122, 1123. 1124
— , (Ed. ) , on dependence of Northwest Fur
Company on wild rice 1103
— , (Ed.), on "Fols Avoiu Sauteurs " 1042
— , (Ed.), on popular synonym for wild
rice 1024
— , (Ed.), on sections of country named
from wild rice 1116
— , (Ed.), on time of year when Dakota
consume wild rice 1087
— , (Ed.), on popular synonym for wild
rice 1023
— , (Ed.), on wild rice in North Dakota . . 1031 COULTER, JOHN M., on wild rice in Texas. 1032 COUNTING, analogy of, between unimals
and tribesmen 833-834
— AND NUMBEKsystenis, primitive 833-843
COYOTA CLAN, See ISAL'O CLAN.
CRAM, T. J., on influence of wild rice on
geographic nomenclature 1120
CRANE CLAN, see ATOKO CLAX.
— , with the Patufi clan 595
CRANBERRIES, chemical composition of.. 1081 CHAXDALL, C. S.,on introduction of wild
rice into Colorado 1029
CIIKK OR KINISTENO, relations of. with
Saulteaux - 1040
CREEKS, amounts of wild rice harvested
by - 1078
— , standard of life of 1079
CREEKS AND RIVERS named from wild
rice - 1118-1124
CROOKS, at Walpi Snake dance 982-983
CROSS, FOLIATED, Tablet of the. 733-761, 765-771 —, initial series of , inscriptions of 800
Page CUCULCAN, see QUETZALCOATL.
CULT OP THE HALVES 843-847
CULT OF THE QUARTERS 845-840, 948-950
CUNA (Panama) method of forming num- bers 917
CURING OR DRYING wild rice 1064-1066
— , mechanical means employed in 1086
— ,reasonsfor 1064
CURK, E. M. , on Australian number con- cepts 833-834
— , on Australian counting 877
CURRIE BROS., on present sale of wild
rice to whites in Wisconsin 1105
GUSHING, F. H., on Pueblo number
figures 840
— , on quinary system 850
— , on Zuni cardinal points, colors for 835
— , on Zuni numeration 838
CYCLE OF YEARS, meaning of term 705
— symbol for, discovery concerning, by Goodman 712
CYCLES, Mayan, working table of 819
CYCLOPEDIA; OR A NEW UNIVERSAL DIC- TIONARY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, Oil
popular synonym for wild rice 1022
— , on wild rice planted in England 1037
DABLOX, CLAUDE, on duck in Green bay. 1099 — , on nature of Green bay area as Indian
habitat 1112
— , on wild rice eaten with grease by
Maskotin 1085
DAKOTA, earliest historic references to. . 1013
— , population of 1108,1109,1110
— , tribal history, migrations, and settle- ment 1043-1047
— and Ojibwa warfare 1038-1042
— , last war of. to retain wild-rice fields. . 1041 — , wild rice gathered by 1081, 10B2
— tie wild rice 1058
— , amounts of wild rice harvested by 1076
— cure wild rice 1064,1065
— thrash wild rice by treading and rub- bing 1069
— store wild rice 1072
— , wild rice consumed by 1083
— , population of, consuming wild rice... 1045,
HUT, 1057 — , time of year when they consume wild
rice - 1087
—.mealtime of 1087
— , peculiar wild-rice feast of 1092
— , standard of life of 1079
— property-right in wild rice 1073
— , wild-rice moons of 1090
DARLINGTON, WILLIAM, on early use of
word "Zizania" 1021
DAVIS, JEFFERSON, on wild rice in vicin- ity of Madison. Wisconsin 1036
DAVY, J. BURT, on absence of wild rice
inCalifornia 1029
DAY, Mayan, symbols of 713-714
DAYS of the Mayan "four series of
years" 702-703
— , Mayan, method of counting 707
DECIMAL SYSTEM, employed by the So- noran and Shoshonean peoples 922
1144
INDEX
[ETH. ANN.
Page DECIMAL-VIGESIMAL SYSTI-:M. employed
l>y ( ituomian, Taraacau, Totonacan, and
Huastecan peoples 922
DEEII CI.AX, w? Sowixr < i. \v
DELAWARE*, imputation of lion, 1109, 1110
DETROIT GAZETTE, on wild rice as bien-
ntalplant.. 1025
DE VAUUONDY, on synonym for Menom-
ini Indians 1048
DIARIO, quotation of Garces from 599
DIAZ, CAPTAIN MELCHIOH, ou location of
Totonteac 599
DII'KSON, ROBEHT, on dependence of fur
traders on wild rice 1103
— , on popular synonym for wild rice lies?
DIESSELDORF, on monster's head from
Quirigua 674
— , on painting of Cuculean 678-679
DIETKICH USD KONIG, on composition of
wild rice 1081
— , ou popular synonym for wild rice 1023
DIRECTION-SENSE, in primitive men and
animals 848-847
DIVISION OF LABOR between sexes, in
wild-rice industry 1066
Doc. COLL. HIST. NEW YORK, on Menom-
ini population 1049
Doc. OF HOUSE OF REI>., on Menomlni
use of wild rice 1049
DODGE. GOVERNOR, on Menomiui use
of wildrice 1049
DOLL ET AscHEiis.on scientific synonym
for wild rice 1021
DOMINICAL DAYS 705-706
DORASQUE (Panama) method of forming
numbers 917
DOHSEY, JAMES OWEN, on popular syno- nym for wild rice 102?
DOTY, GOVERNOR, on dependence of fur
traders on wild rice 111)3
— , on dependence of fur trade on wild
rice HIM
— , on Ojibwa eating wild rice seasoned
with rabbit feces lust
DOVE CLAN, tee Ht'wC.
DRAII FLUTE (MACILENYAJ ALTAR, at
Michongnovi '.i 11
DRAGON'S HEAD, effigy of, in Santa Rita
mound 689
DRESDEN CODEX, cited 715-732,
787,716,798,794,797,799, HO.->. 806, 808, 813, 814, 815
— , dominical days of 705
DUCK, the mythic part ployed liy. in
bringing wild rice to the Ojibwa 1094
— , importance of, as gleaners of wasted
wildrice 1098-10WI
EAST MESA, of Hopi country, reference to. 579
-,ritnalsat (Sil I;H
EGOISM of primitive thought s:iii s:si
ELEVENTH CENSUS OK THE T'MTED
STATES: INDIANS, ou Ojibwa tying wild
rice 1058
— , on wild-rice harvest feasts 1091
ELLET, Mrs ET.I/AIIKTH FRIES, on wild
rice in Wisconsin 1034
— , on use of wild rice by early settlers .. ]U4
Page ELLIS, ALHEKT U., on duck in Wi.-consin . Mils
— , on Mi-niimiiii tying wild rice ____ ...... 1058
— , on Henomlnl gat baring wild rice.. li»H. ions
— , on Menoniini thrashingwild rice ...... 1067
— , on winnowing wild rice ................ 1070
— , on Menomini wild-rice broth .......... 1083
— , on Menomini property-right in wild
ric.. .................................. 107:!
— , on popular synonym for wild rice ____ 1023 ELY, PROF. RICHARD T., acknowledg-
ments to ................................ 1019
ENGLISH LANGUAGE, influence of, on geo-
graphic nomenclature ................. 1115
EXTYI.O.MA CHASTOIMIILUM, destructive
to wild rice .............................. HB7
EOTOTO, clan, and mythic personage of.. 605 ESKIMO method of constructing num-
bers ...................................... 928
EVANS, A. GIIAXT, on absence of wild rice
in Indian Territory ...................... 1030
EVANS, ALEX. \V., on wild rice in Con-
necticut .................................. 1029
FAITH, influence of, on Indian economic
life ......................... .. ........ lOlh.KKi:)
FAMILIES, Hop!, determination of _____ 051-652
FARMER, JOHN, on influence of wild rice
on geographic nomenclature ....... liai.llJSJ
FEAR, influence of, in primitive number
concept ................................ K4'l SI4
FKA.THBR8TOHHA.ua H, GEORGE \V]|,
i.i AM. on wild rice in Delaware ........ 1029
— , on wild rice at Fort Winnebago ....... 1034
— , on birds destructive to wild rice ...... II r_>7
— , on influence of wild rice on geo- graphic nomenclature .................. 1120
— , on duck in Minnesota river ........... 1098
FEATURES, unusual, of Walpi Snake
dance .................................. 978-979
FE.IEHVARY CODEX, numerals from . . ir!!i '.11:1 FEKNOLD, M. L., on wild rice in Maine,
and Massachusetts ____ .................. 1030
FEWKI:S, DR JES E \VALT;:H, Tusayan
Flute and Snake ceremonies, by... 957.1011
— , Tusayan migration traditions, by. . . 57:1-633 FIGURINES, u.-:e of, i:i Snake and Flute
rites .................................. 1010-1011
— , of Flute youth, and maiden on altar:
see A'.BO Pttilkofi ................ 989-!>:« >.'.«> :;.:>:>:,
FIREARMS, influence of , on Ojibwa war-
fare .................................. 1)411.1041
FIREWOOD CI.A-:, « <• Ko:coi- CLAN. FISH, painting of, on wall in Santa Rica
mound ..... . .............. .
— , effigy of, in Santa Rita mound ........
FLINT, CHAS. L., on Zizoni.i rniliacea ... FLINT, TIMOTHY, on importance and
cxtensiveness of wild rice crop .........
—, on popular synonym for wild rico .. .
— , on tying wild rice ......................
— , on wild rice as pudding ................
FLOODS, *!•<• WATER.
FI.OI:A CKSTKICA. ou wild rice in Penn- sylvania ..................................
FLUTE ALTARS, at Walpi, description of .
lie i YS, description and function of .....
667 iW-'l 1022
1101
ll«2
1001-
1002
997-
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1145
Page Fi.fTE CEREMONY, at Mishongnovi in
1888 987-1000
— , at Oraibi, memoir on 987
— . pueblos where performed 987
— , public, at Shipanlovi 9H6-1000
— , at Walpi in 1896 1000-1(105
— CHIEFS, description of 997
— , CLAN, see LENYA CLAN.
— , and Flute society, relationship of . 1007-1008
— G I RLS, description and function of .. 997,999
— ;LENYA) SOCIETY, census of (B7
— MAIDEN, figurine of 989-990' 993. 995
— OBSERVANCE, prominent elements in . 1005
— RITES, interpretation of 1009-1011
— ROOMS, at Mishongnovi 988
— , at Walpi 1000-1001
— SONGS, at Walpi 1002-1003
— YOUTH, figurine of 989-990,993,995
FOLIATED CROSS, Tablet of the, initial
series of, inscriptions of 801
FOLLE AVOINE, use of term, see also MENOMINI 1024
— COUNTRY 1042
FOOD, influence of, on primitive thought. 1089
— , on increase of population 1109-1110
FORMOSA, wild rice in 1037
FORSTEMANN, Dr E. reference to discov- eries by 818
— , on Dresden codex 799,805
— , on Mayan division of solar year 954-955
— , on Mayan methods of computation . 932-933
— , on Mayan " old year " , — 748
— , on Mayan time units 715-716
— , on Mayan years , 806
— , on methods of counting Mayan time
symbols 723,724,725,729
— , reference to 699,708
— , on time series of Dresden codex 709-710
FoRsYTH,THOMAs,on use of wild rice by
Sauk 1051
FORT DEFIANCE, home of Hano clans — 614
FORT WIXOATE, site of old Kipo 614
Fox, see Indians in wild ricedistrict 1050
— , see SAUK AND Fox.
— , tribal names, and meaning of same - . . 1050
— (Mechecouquis), population of, in 1784- 1108 '
— , population of 1109,1110 j
— , wild-rice villages of, destroyed by
Ojibwa 1040
Fox RIVER, wild rice in 1033
FRENCH LANGUAGE, influence of, on geo- graphic nomenclature 1115
FROSTS, destructive to wild rice 1027, 1100
FUERTES, E. A., on Zoquean number
names 873
— , on Zoque numerals 907
Fun TRADERS, dependence of, on wild
rice 1101-11(14
GAITCHAIM, numbers of 869-929
GALLATIN, ALBERT, on number names
from San Antonio, Texas 881
GAMA, ANTONIO, on Mayan calendar
periods _ 675
GANN. THOMAS, mounds in northern
Honduras, by 655-692
GARCES, FRAY FRANCISCO, cited on
Moriui (Hopi) 598
— , on location of Morjui (Hopi) 599
Page GATHERING WILD RICE, mechanical
means employed in 1064
GATSCHET, DR ALBERT S., on Akal'man
number names 874
— . on Kauvuya number names 868
— , on Shoshone number names 869, 870
— , on Shoshonean numerals 923
GEOGRAPHIC NOMENCLATURE, influence
of wild rice on 1115-1126
GHF.KN, STEPHEN, on amounts of wild
rice harvested 1077
— , on failure of wild rice crop 1099
— , on Ojibwa storing wild rice in cedar- bark bags 1072
— , on birch-bark winnowing fan 1071
GIBBS, quinary- vigesimal system in Cali- fornia 924
GILFILLAN, J. A., on present use of wild
rice by whites in Minnesota 1105
GILLEN, F. J., on Australian intermarry- ing groups - 836
GOODMAN, J. T., on Copan Inscriptions . 776- 777, 778, 779. 780-783, 784, 785, 7*6, 7K7, 788
— , chronolgical calendar of .. 759
— , copy and interpretation of inscrip- tions from Temple of Inscriptions 771-775
— , on the " grand era" in Mayan chronol- ogy 794,795,796,797,798,799,800
— , on importance of Ahau and Mayan
time counts 816
— , on initial series of various Mayan in- scriptions 800-806
— , on interpreting Mayan time symbols. 760 — , interpretation of dates on Foliated
Cross, by 765-771
— , on interpretations of Tablet of the
Cross 740-743,744,746-747,748
— , on Mayan chronology 716-793
— , on Mayan day names 808-811,812
— , on Mayan directive signs 751
— , on Mayan methods of computation . 932-933
— , on Mayan reckoning 728
— , on Ma yan symbols 791
— , on Mayan time series 710
— , on Mayan time symbols 711-714
— , on method of Mayan time reckon- ing 732
— , on names for Mayan time units 715-720
— , on names for Mayan time periods 723,
724, 725, 726
— , on numeral systems in the codices 814
— , references to 699,
700, 701, 704, 705, 706, 708, "57. 738
— , on Tablet of the Sun 761,762-763,765
— , system of Mayan chronology by 792-800
— , on Tablet of the Cross 7:i3-738
— . theory of, applied to reading Piedras
Negras inscriptions 788-791
— , on time symbols of the Tablet of the
Cross 749, 750. 751
GOURDS. at Antelope altar.... 968-969
GRASSERIK, RAOUL DE LA, on Mixo nu- merals above ten 906
— , on Zoquean number names 873
GKEEN HAY, wild rice in 1IKJ3
— AREA, nature i if, as Indian habitat.. 1111-1112 — , Indians and condition of, in 1112-1113
1146
INDEX
[KTH. ANN. 19
Page GIIONOVIOUS, on scientific synonym for
wild rice 1021
GORDON, HANFORD LENOX, on Dakota
use of wild rice 1057
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1123
— , on meaning of Dakota words 1061
— , on Oj ibwa wild-rice moons 1090
GUAKDIA, B. F., on Chibchan number
names ^''
— , on Totonacan number names 874
— , on Tzotzil number names 863
GUAYMI (Veraguas) method of forming
numbers 916
GUAYMI SABANKKO (Panama) method of
forming numbers' 916
GUAJIQUIHO (Honduras) method of
forming numbers 915
HAHAWE, Hopi chief, on advent of clans
at Walpi 585
HAI' IT, number names of 871
HALE, HOKATIO, on early home of Siouan
stock 1043
HALVES, CULT OF THE 843-847
HAM', Hopi Tobacco clan chief, reference
to 579
HANO, location of, in Hopi country 579
— CLANS, advent o£, at Walpi 585
— , descendants of Tewa clans 614
— , migrations, and census of 614-622
— , names, and location of 615-616
— PUEBLO, origin, language, and culture
of 633
— . Piba chief in Walpi 601
— HITUAI,.- , 632-633
HAH.MON, DANIEL, on dependence of
Northwest Fur Company on wild rice.. 1103
— , on Ojibwa gathering wild rice 10H2
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1U23
HARSHBERGER, PROF. JOHN W., on rea- sons for study of etuno botany 1028
HATCO, on Hano migrations 614
HAVASUPAI BASKET, contains paho, at
Walpi Snake altar 983
HEBBERD, STEPHEN SOUTHHICK, on na- ture of Green bay area 1111
— , on Indian population at Green bay in
1670 1106-1107
HKIIIN, SVEN, on magical number sixty- one 849
HENDERSON, ALEXANDER, on Maya nu- merals -- 897
— , ou Maya numeral system 891,893,894
HENDERSON, L. F., on absence of wild rice
in Idaho 1029
HENNEPIN, Louis, on Dakota tying wild
rice 1058
— , on wild rice as Indian food 1084,1085
— , on wild rice in Minnesota. 1034
— , on duck in Mille Lacs 1099
HENRY, ALEXANDER, on dependence of
fur traders on wild rice 1101-1102
— , on Indians saving wild rice until the
next harvest 1088
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1022
— , on use of maple sugar as food l<>i'-r)
Page HENRY, ALEXANDER, on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature 1122
HEWITT, J. N. B.,on Shahaptiau numera- tion , 838
HI.MI, HKNHY YOULE, on wild rice in
Winnipeg system 1035
— , on dependence of Indian on wild rice. 1100
— , on wild rice eaten with blue berries.. 1083
— , on birds destructive to wild rice 1027
— , on wild rice destroyed by caterpillars 1100
— , on drowning of wild rice 1099
HITCHCOCK, A. S., on absence of wild rice
in Kansas 1030
HODGE, F. W., on city of Cibola 650
HOFFMAN, Dn WALTER J., on Menomini
origin of Winnebago tribal name 1052
— , on organization of Menomini tribe 1091
— , Menomiui synonymy of, reference to . . 1048
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1023
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1119
—, on Menomini gathering wild rice 1062
— , on Menomini curing wild rice 1(166
— ,on Menomini thrashing wild rice 1068
— ,on Menomini winnowing wild rice with
birch-bark fan 1071
— , on Menomini storing wild rice in cedar- bark bags 1(172
— , on Menomini eating wild rice with
maple sugar 1085
HOKONA-.MANA (Butterfly-vigin slab) at
Walpi Snake altar 983
HOLMES, PROF. W.H., reference to 699
HOMOLOBI, date of removal of clans
from 598-603
— .siteof old Patki pueblo 597
HONANI (BADGER) CLAN, advent of, at Walpi 585-588
— migrations, and censusof 606-607
— GROUP, component clans of 584
- WOMEN stolen, and divided between
Mastcomo, Mishongnovi.and Walpi 606
HONAU (BEAR) CLAN, advent of, at
Walpi 585-586
— , early history and census of 604
— GROUP, component clans of 584
HoNAUPABi.sameas Kipo 614
HONDURAS, bas-reliefs at ti72
HoNYi.Flute speaker chief, at Walpi. 1001-1004
— .prominent Antelope priest 977
HOPI CALAKO, said to have come from
Wiuima ... 612
HOPI, not descended wholly from north- ern nomads 633
— CEREMONIES, time of performing 963
—.purpose of 963
c oMMi'MTiES.modern causes for con- centration of 577
— MIGRATIONS, legends concerning 578
— .influence of early Spaniards on 581-582
— PUEBLOS 579-582
—.number names of 870,930
— RITUAL, Christian influence on 936
—.growth of 678
HAKE ci.AN.s^e Sowi CLAN.
HORN ci.AK.see ALA CLAN.
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1147
Page HORN-FLUTE CLAN, see ALA-LENY.V
CLAN. HOUSE, influence of, on modern Dakota
migrations 1044
HOUGH, DH WALTER, witnessed Snake
dance at Mishongnovi 964
HOUSE EXECUTIVE DOCUMENT, THIRD SESSION. F'FTY-THiiiD CONGRESS, on failure of wild-rice fields in Minnesota. 1114 —.TWENTIETH CONGRESS, SECOND SES- SION, on population in wild-rice district
in 1829 1111
—.MISCELLANEOUS DOCUMENT 36, THIR- TIETH CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION, on importance of wild rice to the Indian.. 109" HOUSE OK REPRESENT ATI VES, documents of, cited on popular synonyms for wild
rice lies
HOUSE STEPS, initial series of, inscrip- tions of 801
HOWARD, DrL.O., on Lissorhoptrus sim- plex 1027
HOWARD, O., on absence of wild rice in
Utah 1032
HUASTECA, number names of 882,863
HUAVE method of forming numbers 918
HUCHNOM method of forming numbers.. 912 HUDSON BAY COMPANY, dependence of,
on aboriginal production- 1KH
HUITZILOPOCHLI, Mexican god of death, painting of, on wall in Santa Rita
mound 669
HUMAN SKELETON, in Santa Ritamound 688 — FIGURES, effigies of, in Santa Rita
mounds 683,684,685
HUNTER, JOHN DUNN, on time of Indian
meals - 1087
— , on use of wild-rice gruel by Indians . . 1086 — , on wild rice between Mississippi river
and Rocky Mountains in United States . !<£>- HURON, see Indians in wild-rice district . 1055 HUTCHINSON, JOHN, on Ojibwa gather- ing wild rice 1063
— , on Ojibwa curing wild rice 1064-1065
Huwi CLAN, relations of, with Tcua
clan 588-590
IDOLS, in mounds at Santa Rita 678-685
IMAGES, stone, of animals in Walpi Snake
dance 980,982
INDIAN, dependence of, on wild rice. 109.V1101 INDIAN AFFAIRS REPORT, on present
civilization of Winnebago.-- 1052
— , on Menomini population 1049
— , on Menomini eating wild rice with
maplesugar 1085
— , on wild rice stored in Wisconsin Hit:;
— , on wild rice in Minnesota river. . 1034, lift"; — , on dependence of Indian on wild rice. 1096, 1097-1098,1100,1101 — , on time of year Indians consume wild
rice 1087
— , on amounts of wild rice harvested 1075,
1076, 1077
— , on drowning of wild rice 1()99
— , on Indian standard of life 1079
— , on dependence of white man on wild rice HO*
Page INDUSTRIES, primitive, egoism reflected
in 832
INSCRIPTIONS, Copan 776-788
— , at Piedras Negras 78S-791
— , TEMPLE OF 771-775
— , initial series of, inscriptions of 801
INTIWA, Hopi chief, on advent of clans at
Walpi ...'. 585
IOWA INDIANS, population of, in 1S2-2 1110
Inoyuois, Ojibwa name for 10li9
— , influence of, on westward migration
of Siouan stock KH3
— and Ojibwa warfare 1039
IHWI.N, MAJOR, quoted. through Jedidiah
Morse, on Menomini use of wild rice . 1048-1049 ISAuC, Coyote clan, advent of, at Walpi. . 585 ISBA SPRING, Hano pueblo near, on East
mesa (iln.iii.-,
Ix i L, number names of 862
— method of forming numbers above
ten WI4-JH6
IXTLILXOCHITL, on early migrations of
Toltec (.76
JACALTECA method of forming numbers
above ten 905
— , number names of 863
JAHRESBERHHT ('UK it DTE FORT-
SCHRITTE DER AGRI KULTURCHEM IE.
on popular synonym for wild rice 1024
JAMES, GEORGE WHAIITON, acknowledg- ment to 980
JAPAN, wild rice in 1037
JEMEZ, home of Hauo clans 614
— pueblo, homeof Kokop clan 604
JENKS, DR ALBERT ERNEST, wild rice
gatherers of the upper lakes, by ... 1013-1 137 JESSUP, HENRY C., on wild rice in New
Hampshire 1031
JESUITS, as chroniclers of Indian data 1113
JETTIPEHIKA, site of old Patki pueblo .. 597 JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA, on meaning of
Cabala 828
JICAQUE DE YOHO (Honduras) method
of forming numbers 915
— DEL PALMAR (Honduras) method of forming numbers 915
JIVIROS, number names of 877
JONES, L. R..on wild rice in Vermont... 1032 JONES, MARCUS E., on wild rice in Ne- braska 1031 '
JONES, PETER, on Ojibwa gathering
wild rice 1063
— , on thrashing wild rice by treading — 1068
— , on birch-bark winnowing fan 1071
JOSOGE, foundation of Gil
JUPILTEPEQUE, number names of 881
JuTiAPA.numbersof.... 881,931
KAETIHA, home of Asa clan 610
KAKAPTI, Antelope priest, description
Of US')
K'AK'CHI, methods of forming numbers above ten 901-903
KALEKTAKA, name of warrior society among Pakab clans 609
— .religious societyat Walpi, source of. 623,630 KALAKWAI, Hopi clan chief, reference
to... 579
1148
INDEX
[ETH. A.X.X. Ill
Page KAPO PUEBLO, speaks same language as
Hano clans 614
KARANKAWA. number namesof 877
KASKASKIA. population of, in 1764 1108
KATCI. Antelope priest, description of... 984 KATCI, Kokop chief, on original home of
Kokop 004
KATCINA, or Aiiwuei clan, migrations
and census of 007,608
— CLAN, ad vent of, at Walpi 585
—.census of ii20-i!22
—.migration of 606
— , cults from New Mexican pueblos at
Walpi, unique origin of 630-631
— GROUP, component clans of 584
— SOCIETY, source and census of 623
KATCINABA, home of Katcina clan »VI7
KATUN, Mayan, working table of 819
— SYMBOL, discovery concerning, by Goodman 712
KAUVUYA, formation of number names in 879
— , number names of 868, 876, 879, 923. H2!i
KAWAiKA.home of Asaclan 610
KEAMS CAN YON, site of old Puflci 614
—.same as Pufici ... 604
KEATING, WILLIAM, on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature 1 122
— , on wild rice in water system of Red
River of the North 1035 j
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1033
KECHE, number namesof 869,870
— (San Luis), numbers of 929 i
— (San Diego), numbers of 930
KECHI, formation of number names in.. 879, j
895-899
KECLAN, census of iils.i;22
KELE CLAN, with the Patun clan 595
KELLERMAN, W.E., on wild rice in Ohio. 1031
KERN RIVER PEOPLES, numbers of 929
KICKAPOO, tribal history, migrations,
and settlement of 1055
— , population of 1108,1110
— , in wild-rice district 1107
— , amounts of wild rice harvested by ... 1075
— , standard of life of 1079
Kicu, home of Katcina clan 607
Ku or Kizh, number names of 870
— , numbers of ... 950
KIXCSBOROUGH, ROBERT, on Mendoza
• coder 945-947
— , on Vatican codex 947-948
KIXISTEXO, sec Cree. KINSHIP ORGANIZATION, egoism re- flected in ... 831
KINZIE, Mrs JOHN H., on birch-bark
winnowing fan 1071
Kl l'o, home of Hano clans til 1
KISAKOBI. second site of Walpi pueblo.. .>n KISI, description and origin of !C), 10H5
— (brush house i, for containing the rep- tiles used in Snake dance H7'!. IK 7
KISIWI. Ala clan at ~>'.*i
Ki v.v, cause for building »iU
— , comparative antiquity of circular and
rectangular li.ss
— , at Mishongnovi HtiB
KI/H, see Ku.
Page
KNOWLEDGE, growth of. essentials to . Bt KOHL, JOHANN OEORC. on influence of wild rice on geographic nomenclature. 1116
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1'Ct
— , on wild rice in southern part of Lake
Superior 1034
— , on wild rice in Lake Huron 1037
Kukdi'i FIUKWCMIII ci. AN. former homes.
migrations, and census of 6i4-W»>
— , advent of, at Walpi 585-586
— GROUP, component clans of 584
KOLON CLAN, census of 617-iils. 1,22
KONKAU, number names of 871
KOPELI, Snake clan chief, referenceto .. 579
— , at Walpi 975
KOTKA, Honau chief 604
KRAUTBAUEH, F. X.. on synonym for
Menomini Indians 1048
Kt'Kt'Tr (Li/AHDi CLAN, advent of, at
Walpi 585
KPKt'TC CLAN, memlier of Patki group,
mention of 596
Kt'Kl'TC-TuwA, Lizard-Sand clan, ad- vent of , at Walpi 585
KrxrnAi.Pi, probable original home of
Patki clans 597
KWAA, Antelope priest, description of.. 984-985
KWACTAPABI, Ala-Lenya clan at 591
KwAKWANTf, a society of Patki clan 595
— , religions society at Walpi, source and
census of 633,629
KWAVASOMPI, religions society from, at
Walpi 623
KwAVONAMPi.home of Pakab clans 608
K WIN A PA, site of old Patki pueblo 597
LABPHAK, bas-reliefs at 672
LAC Cot'RTE OREILLE, first permanent
Ojibwa settlement at 1041
LAC DU FLAMBEAU, first permanentOjib-
wa settlement at 1041
LAGUNA, same as Kawaika.
LACUNA, JUAN BAUTISTA DE, on Tarasco
numerals _ 909
LA HAHPE, BERNARD DE, on Le Sueur building fort to effect treaty between
Dakota and Ojibwa 1039
— , on Dakota storing wild rice in home- made sacks 11173
— , on Dakota use of wild rice 1IH6
— , on Dakota villages 1IU7
— , on Dakota eating wild rice lns.">
LAKI-:, E. R., on absence of wild rice in
Oregon '. HH1
LAKE OF TII i: WOODS, wild rice in 1035
LAKKK. named from wild rice 1118-1124
LAI.AKUNTP, religious society at Walpi,
source and census of ti:.':i. r»'.".i
LAMSUX-SI HIBXKK. F.. on popular syno- nym for wild rice 1023, 1024
— , on Oryzopsis c-xigua In22
— , scientific determination of wild riee . 1021 — , wild rice in District of Columbia, also
in Delaware river 1039
LAX in. rin symbols in codices i>7n i;ll
— , on use of uhau 717-718
I, \ N< . TACK, primitive, egoism reflected in .. 831-832
KTH. ANN. 19]
INDKX
1149
Page
LAXGI.OIS, A. B., on wild rice in Loui- siana 11130
LAPHAM, I. A., on influence of wild rice
on geographic nomenclature 1120,1121
LAWK GtBORQH»on Menomini eating wild
rice with maple sugar _ H185
LKAX Y Mrr.iA, numlier names of 882
--, numbers of 882, 931
LKXYA CLAN, possible advent of, into
Tusayan 626
— , mythic origin of 590
LKXYAXOBI, founding of 586
— , Ala clan at. 580
LKOX, NICHOLAS, on Tarasco numerals. . 909 — , on Tarascan and Chiapanecan number
names '.... 874
— , on Zapotecan number names 872
LE SUEUR, on Dakota eating wild rice -. 1065
— , on peace between Dakota and Ojibwa. 1041
— , on Dakota storing wild rice in sacks.. 1072
— , on Dakota use of wild rice 1046
LETTRES EDIFIANTES, on separation of
Assiniboin from their Siouan kinsmen. 1054 LEWIS AND CLARKE, on Dakota posses- sion of horses 1044
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1122
LIGHTNING SYMBOLS, at Mishongnovi
Cakwalenya altar 992
— , at Mishongnovi Flute altar 990
— . atOraibi altar 993
— . at Shipaulovi altar 995
Li XK, on scientific synonym for wild rice. 1021 Li \XKUS, herbarium of, on scientific syn- onym for wild rice 1021
LissonHOPTRUS SIMPLEX, destructive to
wild rice... 1027
LITTLE COLORADO, river, Hopi clans
from 582-583
— , pueblos from 594-603
— , PUEBLOS, religious societies from, at
Walpi 623
LIZARD CLAN, see Kt)Kt'TC CLAN. LLOYD, map, 18(13, on influence of wild rice
on geographic nomenclature 1118
LOCKWOOD, JAMES H., on Dakota wild- rice thanksgiving feast 1091
LOKOTAAKA, Ala clan at 590
LONG JOHN, on popular synonym for
wild rice 1023
— , on wild-rice baby food 1086
— , on Dakota wild-rice moons 1090
— , on wild-rice death feast of Potawa-
tomi 1091-1092
— , on dependence of fur traders on wild
ri<-e 1102
-, on synonym for Menomini Indians 1048
— , on wild rice north of Lake Superior.- 1037
LOOKOUT MOUNDS, at Santa Eita 685-686
LoRiLLARDCiTY, bas-reliefs at 672
LIMIIOLTZ, CARL, on Australian ternary
concept — -- 837
LYTTLE, ROBERT T.. map of, 1837, on influ- ence of wild rice on geographic nomen- clature - H17
Page McBAiN, SAMUEL, on aljsence of wild rice
in Tennessee 11(12
MCCARTY, GERALD, on wild rice in North
Carolina 1031
MACCAUI.EY, H. CLAY, on wild rice in
Florida 1029
MACFAKLANE, JOHN R., on wild rice in
Pennsylvania 1031-1032
MrGKB, PROF. W .1. acknowledgments to. 1020
— , on beginnings of agriculture lo'rti
— , on beginnings of mathematics. . . S74 s75. uTT
-^, on California number names t-71
— , on Cult of tho Quarters '.its !U!i
— , on Maya method of computation 933
— , on origin of Assiniboin tribe 1054
— , on influence of bison on migration of
Sionan stock 1043
— , on relation between barefoot and san- dal-wearing people and the vigesimal
system 925
— , primitive numbers, by 821 xr>\
MAC KAY, A. H., on wild rice in New
Brunswick and Newfoundland 1U57
McKENNEY, THOMAS L., on birds de- structive to Wild rice 1 27
— , on drowning of wild rice lOBtt. 1100
MACKENZIE, ALEXANDER, on wild rice
northwest of Lake Superior 103S
MACLOSKIE, G., on wild rice in New Jer- sey Kit!
MACMILLAN, CONWAY, on wild rice in
Winnipeg system 1035
McNr.iLL, JEROME, on absence of wild
rice in Arkansas 1029
MACILESYA, religious society at Walpi, source of 1123
— ALTAK, same as Drab Flute altar 989
— SOCIETY, personnel of 996-997
MAIZE, see CORN.
MAI. Kit. TEOBERT, inscriptions discov- ered at Piedras Negras by. cited 7X8
MALLERY, GARRICK, on time Dakota first possessed horses 1044-1045
MAME, number names of 862-864
— formation of numbers above ten 903-1104
MAMZiiiUTp, religous society at Walpi,
source and census of 62:>. i»io
MA'XXBUSH, the mythic personage who first gave wild rice to the Menom- ini - KKI2 lo»3
MANITOBA HIST. AND Sci. Soc., on 'in- fluence of wild rice on geographic no- menclature 1121
AlA.No'Mlx, etymology of the word 1024
MAPLE SUGAR, as food 1084-1085.1095
MAHICOPA, number names of 871
MARQUETTE, Pins, on popular synonym
for wild rice 1025
— , on wild rice in Fox river 1033
— , on location of Assiniboin, and their use
of wild rice 1055
— , on curing wild rice -. H"l»
— , on thrashing wild rice 1068
— , on wild rice eaten with grease 1084
— , on Dakota property-right in wild rice. 1073
HI KTH, PT -2 — 01-
1150
INDEX
[ETH. ANN. 1!'
Page M MITIN, chief of Ottawa, on import;imv
of wild rice to Indian . . - I"1-*1'
MASAITMTIWA. Hopi chief, on advent of
chins at \Valpi 5x5
MASAI'! . tutelary Rod of Sekyatki; also
clan, overthrow of, by Hanau clan t'd'4
MASKOTIS, see Indians in wild-rice dis- trict- II Bi
— , in wild rice district 1107
— , tribal names, history, migration, and
settlement WM-lOW
— , population of , in 1764 1108
— , on wild rice eaten with grease 11185
MASON, DK OTIS T., acknowledgments to. 1020 MATHEWS, C. W., on wild rice in Ken- tucky 1030
MATLAI.TZINCAN, or Pirinda, number
names of 873
MATSVMUKA, PKOF. J., on identity of
Zizania aquatica in Japan 1021,1037
— , on popular synonyms for wild rice in
Japan, China, and Formosa 1024
— , on Ustilago escnlenta 1027
MAUDSLAY, A. P., reference to Biologia
Centrali-Americana 700
— , reference to drawing of Tablet of the
Cross 754
— , drawing of Copan inscriptions by,
cited 804,805
— , on inscriptions from Copan 728
— , on inscriptions of the Quirigua 743
— , on Mayan year 748
— , reference to. 6B9, 711
— , photograph of Foliated Cross by, cited . 785 — , photograph of Copan inscriptions by,
cited 776, 777, 778. 785, 795, 80H
— , photograph of inscriptions from Tem- ple of the Sun by, cited 732
— , photograph of Sun Tablet by, cited . . 761 — , photograph of Temple of Inscriptions
by, cited 771,774
— , on interpretation of Sun Tablet 739
— , on reading Maya glyphs 708
— , on reading of Piedras Negras inscrip- tions according to Goodman's theory. 788-791 MAY, L. L. & Co., on present salo of wild
rice to whites 1105
MAYA, or Toltec. builders of mound- covered temples at Santa Rita 870-S73
MAYA HAYS, list of 807
MAYAS CALENDAR SYSTEMS BH3-819
MAYAN NUMBER NAMES, formation of.-, stt', 8H3,KHO.Min «U
MAZATKCA method of counting 878
- -method of forming numbers above
ten 872,88B-wu.'.ai
MEALTiME,ainong Indians low I"---
MECIIF.I orvris, ••"•'• Fox.
MEDICINE BOWL and aspergill, in Walpi
Snake dance !>s:;
MEI.L, P. H., on wild rice in Alabama ... II BK MKMBKENO. AI.HKHTO, on the Honduras
Chorti mnnlier mimes 863
— , on Moreno and Sumo numerals 914
— , on ^imilaton numerals 916
— , on Sumo, Paya, Jicaque, and Guaji- quiro numerals !tl.">
Page
MKMIO/A, on It-cation of Totonteac 5!**.<
C'IIIIK.X. numbers from !«SI.!M.~> 1147
MKVOMINI, see Indians in wild-rice dis- trict 1047
— , meaning of tribal name Hits
- . synonymy of tribal name 1<MS
— , influence of wild rice on tribal organi- zation of lOIHI 1IW
— , first historic mention of 11147
— , early description of 1107
-, population of 1049,1108,1109,1110
— tie wild rice 1058
— , wild rice gathered by lOta. 1003
— eat wild rice 108-i, 1086
— cure wild rice 1066
— , wild-rice thrashing stick 1068
— winnow wild rice 1071
— , amounts of wild rice harvested by . 1075-1077 — , dependence of, on wild rice 1047-1049
— thrash wild rice 1068,1089
— , mealtime of 1087
— , property-right in wild rice 1073
— , standard of life of 1079
— , time of year when they consume wild
rice 1087
— HivEit, wild rice in HKi
MEKKELL. HENHY, on popular synonym
for wild rice 1023
MEXICAN YEA us, and days in calendar
order !»:«-(«8
MIAMI, population of 1108,1109.1110
MiCHArx, on scientific synonym for wild
rice lir-'l
MiCHOACAN.orTarascan, number names H74 M i ['in .1: MESA of Hopi country, reference
to... 579
— SNAKE DANCE, most primitive form .. 986 MIGRATION, character of Pueblo... 644,645,648 — , PUEBLO, influence of water supply
on - 645-648
MI.J K, or Mixe, number names of — 873
MILLK LACS, wild rice in 1035
MII.LEKTON, members of 930
MINDKI.EFF, COSMOS, localization of Tu-
sayan clans, by 635-<>53
— , on snake dance at Mishongnovi 973
— , on kivasat Mishongnovi 966
— published Snake dance in issfi 965
Mi Ni»KLEt'F. VICTOR, on antiquity of kiva
forms 988
— , on kivasat Mishongnovi 966
— . architectures, study of Tusayan, ref- erence to 579
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS. on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature ll^t
MINNESOTA KIVEK (St Peters), wild rice
in H«5
MISIIONUNOVI Antelope altar 9m> %u
— , Flute ceremony at, in 1896 987-HKK)
— , founded by the Patufl clan itfti
— , location of, in Hopi country 579
— , OLD, pueblo of Patun clan 595
— . Snake dance at, in 1897 946-976
MississA<;r A cure wild rice 1065.1066
— thrash wild rice by flailing lutiH
— eat wild rice .. 1081
BTII. ANN. Ill]
INDEX
1151
Page
MISSISSIPPI invKit.head waters of . wild rice in 1KM
Mm HELL.S. AUGUSTUS, on influence of wild rice on geographic nomenclature. 1117,
MITCHELL, JOHN, on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature 1120,
1121,1128
Mi' wCK, number names of 871
MlXE method of forming numbers above
ten , 908
— , numbers of. '.130
MIXTEC. numbers of 872,930
MOCOCK (birch-bark box), fur carrying,
containing, and storing wild rice 10HO
MOHAWK, population of.in 1822 1110
MOHOCE, mention of 598
Moi STU UK-TABLET, bearer of. description
of 998
MOLL, HERMAN, map of, locating Kicka-
poo , 1055
MOMTCITA, ceremony of Pakab clans 608
MONPA, Ala clan at 590
MONTH, Mayan, symbols of 714
MONTHS or Mayan "four series of
years" 702-703
MOON, the wild-rice, origin of 1089-1090
MOONEY, JAMES, on cause of Siouan mi- grations 1043
MOONS, or months, origin of Indian names
for 1089
MOOKE. C. W., on present use of wild rice
by whites 1105
Mooui PUEBLO, number names of 876
MOKENO (Honduras) method of forming
numbers 914
MORHIS, on mystical numbers 835
MOUSE, DH JKDIDIAH, on early conquest
of Sauk and Fox territory by Menomini . 1050 — , on Oneida and Stockbridge Indians. .. 1111
— , on Winnebago population 1053
— , on Menomini population 1049
— , on influence of nourishing food on in- crease of poptilation. 1109-1110
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1023
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1116.1121,112)
— , on absence of wild rice immediately
south of Lake Superior 1034
— , on destruction of wild rice by storms. 1100 — , on dependence of fur traders on wild
rice 1103,1104
— , on Menomini thrashing wild rice 1068
MOSO.UITO, numbers of 877,881,931
MoT7.FKi.iiT, J., on amounts of wild rice
harvested by Ojibwa 1074
MOUNDS of Santa Rita, classification
of 662-663
— , characteristics of 683-665
— , paintings on the walls of 665-070
MOUNTAIN-SHEEP CLAN, mention of 5%
MUDIIEADS, same asTatcuktu _ 631
M c mm (Rio Grande Valley), Hopi clans
from 582,584
— , clans from 604-613
MCl YlSwr, "flower mound " of 990
Mr LI. Kit. on Totonacan number names .. 874
Page
MI-NSKE, population of llliit. 1110
MYSTICISM of primitive thought 82! i s:in
NAGHANDA method of forming numbers
above ten 912
NAHUATL or Aztec method of forming
numerals above ten MS:; ss/i
NAHCATI.. numbersof 8tiii.,sti7,878.922.!i28
NAIUCHE, Zufii Bow chief 609
NAKl' .M, mini tier nalni-H of 871
N A \i in-;, pueblo of, speaks same language
as Hano clans ti!4
NAMES FOU PLACES, Indian method of
assigning 1115
XAN CLAN, census of 820.822
NASYUNWEVE, Hopi chief, on advent of
clausat Walpi 585
NATACKA, masks of, reference to 612
NAVAHO, influence of, on Pueblo archi- tecture 642 -843
NEILL, EDWARD DUFFIELD, on Stephen
Brule as flrst white man to visit Ojibwa. 1059 — , on Ojibwa eating human flesh with
wild rice 1084
— , on Dakota villages 1045
— , on cause of Dakota migration from
wild-rice fields 1044
— , on Dakota wild-rice moon 1090
— , on Dakota tying wild rice 1058
— , on Dakota curing wild rice 1084
— , on Dakota thrashing wild rice ... 1068
— , on Dakota eating wild rice 1083
— , on Dakota storing wild rice 1072
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1023
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1123
NELSON, AVEN, on absence of wild rice
in Wyoming 1(82
NEWBEKRY, J. S., on wild rice in Lake
Huron 1037
NEW BRUNSWICK, wild rice in 1037
NEWCOMBK, F. C., on wild rice in Michi- gan : 1030
NEWFOUNDLAND, wild rice in 1037
NEW MEXICO, Hopi clans from 582, 5x4
— , PUEBLOS of, clans from 8O4-613
NEW YORK COLONIAL DOCUMENTS, on
popular synonym for wild rice 1023
NICOLLET. SIEUR JEAN, on discovery of
Menomini, and their use of wild rice.. . 1048 NIEL, on migrations of Tanoan people... 611
NISHINAM. number names of 871
NIZA, FRIAR, on Cibola 650
NORTHWEST FUR COMPANY, dependence
of, on wild rice ... 1103
NOTATION AND AUUMENTATION 839-843
NOcAKi, Spanish mission house at old
Walpi r>80
NUMBER-CONCEPT, germs of 843-847
NUMBERS, in Mexican codices 934-048
— , integral, primitive symbols of, extra- natural potencies 842-843
— , mythic and ceremonial use of 948-9"i5
— , place of, in growth of knowledge . . . 825-828
— , primary 850-HS2
— ,primitive H21-851
— , law of augmentation in s:{!l sc;
- systems, and counting, primitive S33-M3
1152
I N I>K. X
I KTII. ANN. HI
Page
NUMERAL SYSTEMS, in the codices HI:; sin
— , of Mexico and Central America K.W !'.Vi
XI-MKKATIOX. 83S-839
NI-TKITION of wild rice KNi UK)
— , importance of, in primitive sociology . 1089 NVTTAM., on popular synonym for wikl
rice . 1022 '
NrTTAi.i., Miss ZKI.I s, on Mexican cal- endar system (-':t5
OATS, chemical composition of 1082
O.IIHWA, see Indians in wild-rice district. 1088 — , tribal history, migrations, and settle- ments of l(Mi~ 104:.'
—.population of. 1043.1108.1109,1110
—, Dakota name for 1040
- and Dakota warfare WiS-KtW
— and Fox warfare 1041 I
— and Iroquois warfare HWi
— . date when they entered wild-rirc
fields of Wisconsin 1040
— . traditional manner of first obtaining
wild rice lUB-liue
-, wild rice gathered by 1062. 1(K«
— (Rat Portage band i sow wild rice ... 1057
— ( Rice Lake band) sow wild rice 11)57
— (Lac Courte Oreille band' sow wild
rice 1057
•— (Lac Courte Oreille band) tie wild
rice 1(159-1081
— cure wild rice 1065,1066
— (Moose-ear river band) cure wild rice -- 1064-loif>
— Fond du Lac band ) cure wild rice 10P4
— thrash wild rice ... Ioti7
— winnow wild rice .. 1070,1071
— store wild rice in cedar-bark liaits . — 1072
— eat wild rice w*ith blueberries 1IW), 1084
— eat wild rice in Mide' society lodge, in war-dance circle, etc ... 1085-1086
— , time of year when they consume wild rice KIH7.1II8K
— , amountiof wild rice harvested by 1(174-1078 , standard of life of 1079
— property-right in wild rice li)7:i
--, wild-rice moon of .. 1089
O.io C'AI.IEXTK. Pueblo village of, typical
of method of building up 644 ,
OKUWAX CLAX, census of 621-622
OLNKV, wild rice harvesting illustration,
reference to 1057
OXATE. JUAX DK, reference to early visit
of.toMohoce 598
OPATA method of counting 879
— method of forming numbers above
ten '.Ill
— , number names of 867,878. '.122. H2!i
OPHIOLATRY, in the Snake dance 1(108-1009
Oi'i'Ki,. CHAUI.KS ('., on present use of
wild rice by whites - 11(15
OIIAIIII. home of Honani clans 608 |
— . location and settlement of, in Hupi
country 57'.' .>n
OKAIIII KI.ITTK Ai.TAii, comparison with.
of Mishongnovi flute altar !«):{ if.tt
OHAIUI S.NAKK DAXCK, most primitive
for-n '.ISli
— , in 1896 '.r.t
OKKE'. pueblo of, speaks same language
as Hano clans ''1 (
o"i'ixi-'ii. home of Hano clan ill 4
OSHKOSH, Menomini c.hief, referi-m-.-
to IHtll
OTIIOMI, formation of number words in ST'.'
— method of forming numbersabove ten . H":i.
me, MI
OTTAWA, see Indians in wild-rice district 1 J.V>
— , origin of tribe, meaning of name ln:»'.'
— , tribal history, migrations, and settle- ment 1i>55
— , population cif, in 1822 llos. 1110
-, wild rice gathered by .9. 1'Kit
- tie wild rice 10.VJ
- thrash wild rice H»M
— store wild rice in mococks 1(172
— , wild-rice moon of KIWI
Ol'ACHTKXOXS, ft' WKA.
PADDOCK. L. A. .on wild rice in Illinois .. 1029
— . wild rice in Grass lake. Illinois.. Htii
— , on Potawatomi tiirashiug wild rice . . . 1070
— , on Potawatomi eating wild rice 1083
I'AHO (prayer stick), at Walpi Snake
altar Ml
— , at Mishongnovi Cakwalenya altar .... !<'.'.' PAIUTK. California, number names of.. N6!i.s7il
— , Southern, number names of 8 i'.l.fTii
PAKAK KKED CI.AX. advent of. at Walpi. .V"> PAKAII CLANS, migrations and census of mis mo
— group, component clans of 5"1!
PAKATCOMO. pueblo of Patki clan li.M
— . sit.-of old 1'atki pueblo .V.I7
PA i.. \TK\VA ui 'southern Arizona). Hopi
i-hinsfrom 5v.' .>:!
. mythic original home of Patki clans . v.i;
-, clans from 5IH an
— , religions societies from, at Walpi li'.'-i
— , religious societies from «2il r,:i i
PA i.KN(^i'K. bas-relief sat i'>i'.'
— , Inscriptions at 7:i:.' ',','>
—, initial series of 8HO-S01
PAI.MKII. KiiH'Aiin.on Dakota curing wild
rice 1IK5
— , on Dakota thrashing wild rice KKVS
— , on popular synonym tor \vild rire Ki^t
PAi.t'i.t'Kox, the (ireat Snake, in Patki
myths 5ii7
PANQUH'HAS, «'•<• I'lANKISllAW.
PAXWC CLAX. mention of 5!DI
PA PAGO, (matern concept among .. s:tl s:>-"»
PAHTICIPAXTS. nnmlier of, in Walpi
Snakedance !'"9
PXSKIX', Ojibwatraditionist 1(157 lifts
PATKI CI.AXS 5im 1111:1
— , advent of. into Tusayan li'-'ii
— , census of -V.f.i '-"I
— , migrations of 5!»J 5!i7
PATKI (CLOITD) CI.AX. advent of, at
Walpi. ">>:,
— , original home of 5'.wi
— and Walpi relations 5'.I7
«. imcr. comporH'iit clans of 5SJ1
PATXE. in Antelope altar '-«s
PATTKUSON. ItoiiKn. reference to. on (Ircwiiiiiu »'!' wihl rice I'M!
ETH. ANN.
INDEX
1153
Page PATTKBSON, EOGER, on destruction of
wild riceljy storms 1100
— , on Ojibwa tying wild rice 1 "•">!'
— , on Ojibwa gathering wild rice 1082
— , 0:1 Ojibwa curing wild rice 1066
— . on Ojibwa thrashing wild rice. 1088, 1069, 1070
— , on winnowing wild rice 1070
— , on amounts of wild rice harvested — 1077
— . c-n reliability of wild rice crop 1099
PATU.V CLAN, advent of, into Tusayan. . . 620
— . migrations of, in ceremonials 595-596
— , original home and migrations of 595-596
— GROUP, component clans of 583
P.VTl'vPlBA-PATKl societies. 627-630
PATUX (SQUASH) CLAN, advent of, at
Walpi 585
PAUTIWA, Hopi Eagle clan chief, refer- ence to 579,608
PAVANT, number names of 869
PAWIKPA, same as O'pinp'o 614
PAYA (Honduras) method of forming
numbers 915
PEABODY MUSEUM, reference to 699
— , on Mayan inscriptions in 700
PEAH, amounts of wild rice harvested by. 1076
PEAH UTK, standard of life of 1079
PKOKIA (Pianria), population of 1108,1110
PEIIEZ, D. JUAN Pio, on formation of
Mayan number names 866
— , quoted by Brinton on Mayan numer- als 891,892,894
— , quoted by Goodman on Copan inscrip- tions 784
PKIIHAUI.T, JEAN BAPTISTE. on impor- tance of wild rice to fur traders - 1102
PEHHOT, NICOLAS, on Aasiniboin use of
wildrice 1055
— , on Assiniboin sowing wild rice 1057
— , on Dakota occupancy of wild-rice
country 1045-1016
— , on Kickapoo and Masliotin 1107
PETKN, number names of 862
PKTKIIS, En., on composition of wild
rice - i;i8<J-1082
PHALON, PETEH, on reliability of wild- rice crop 1099
—, on Ojlbwa gathering wild rice lotB
— , on thrashing wild rice 1069
— . on win now in ir wild rice HCO
—, on amounts of wild rice harvested ... H>77 PH HATHY, influence of, on Pueblo archi- tecture 651
PiAMUsiiAW (Panquichas), population
•of, in 1764 1108
P.AMHA, see PEOKIA.
PIUA CLAN, original and subsequent
homesof ?- (101
PIBA-TAIIO, TOBACCO-RABBIT CLAN, ad- vent of, at Walpi 585
—.advent of. in Tusayan 626
— , census of 002-6118
— , member of Patki group -- 596
PICKKHINO, CHAHLES, on wild rice in
Florida; also in Arkansas - 1029
PIEDHAS NKGRAS, inscriptions at 7H8-7!<1
PIGEON-HAWK CLAN, with the Patuu clan 595 — , see KELE CLAN.
Page PIKE, ZEBULON MONTGOMERY, on Indian
population in 1806.. 1109
— , on population of Sank and Fox 1051
— , on popular synonym for wild rice. 1(»23, lirjl
— , on Dakota use of wild rice 1048
— , on time of year when Dakota consume
wildrice 1087
— , on dependence of Northwest Fur Com- pany on wild rice 1103
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1123.1124
PIMA, number names of 868,029
PlMENTEL, CONDE DE 1 1 Kit AS FRANCISCO,
on Opata numerals 911
PIN ART, A. L., on Dorasque, Cuna, and
Choco numerals (117
— , on Guaymi and Guaymi Sal>anero nu- merals 916
— , on Quekchi number names 864, 901-903
PINE CI.AN, same as Tenilk clan - 615.619
PIPIL, numbers of 867,928
PutiNiiA, or Matlaltzincan, number
names of 873, 879-880. 931
PITH EH, ROBERT J. N., on birds destruc- tive to wild rice 1027
— , on drowning of wild rice 109!»
— , on sowiag of wild rice by Rat Port&ge
Ojibwa 1057
— , on thanksgiving observance before
wild-rice harvest 1091
— , on Ojibwa gathering wild rice 1063
— , on amounts o£ wild rice harvested 1075
— , on Ojibwa curing wild rice 1065.1086
— , on Ojibwa storing wild rice in cedar- bark bags 1072
PI.ATT, ALBHECHT, on influence of wild
rice on geographic nomenclature 1 122
POKAGON, CHIEF SIMON, on wild rice in
Potawatorai mythology liiitl
— , on popular synonym for wild rice — 1023 — , on Potawatomi gathering wild
rice. 1062,1063
— , on Potawatomi thrashing wild rice in
special bag 106!»
— , on Potawatomi use of birch bark
mococks - 1072
— , on failure of wild-rice crop. . . 1095, 1099, 1100
— , on Potawatomi mealtime J087
— , on Potawatomi property-right in wild
rice 1073
— , on Potawatomi wild-rice moon 1089
POKOMAM, formation of number numi-s
in W.2.SS1P
POKONCHI, formation of number names
in 862.880,901
PO'KWOIDE, pueblo of, speaks same lan- guage as Hano clans 1114
PONTIMA, Antelope priest, description
of 084-985
POPE, JOHN, on influence of wild rice on
geographic nomenclature 1 123
POI-OLOCA, numbers of 872,930
POPULATION, of Indians in the wild-rice
district 1106-1114
— , of all wild ricr consuming Indians ... 1115.") POHTEH. THOMAS C., on wild rice in Pennsylvania H:32
nr.4
IND ]•: x
I1TII. A \V l
Pa ye Page
PIISONWI'. pueblo of, speaks same Ian- QUINARY lyatmn of nnmbon ,s7.~> ssn
^tiai^e us Hano clans - 614 Qui\A KY-VII;KSI MAI. SYSTKM. i -in ployed
I'm \w VTCIMI. see Indians in wild-need i* hy X:ihr.atlan, Zapotecaii, Ma/.aii
trict 1053 j Trikoan, Mixean. and Zoqnean peoples <i:;i
—, origin of tribe 1039 i — , geographic extent or !*-J4
—.meaning of tribal name, history, mi- — , illustrations of ss-.' v»i
grations, and settlement llti!'. lii;Vi '.H'INITMAL ro.\( KI»T. among primitive
— , population of 1108.11(1!), 111(1 people Kf> s:»i
— , population of, consuming wild rice-.. 1'tti yriiu<;i"A, inscriptions of 74:t
- . \vildricegatheredby NHK. K»i3 — , monster's head from ii74
— thrash wild rice 1069-1070 RABBIT CLAN, see TAIICI i UN
— store wild rice in birch-bark boxes 1073 RADISSON, PKTEH ESPK IT, on synonym
— eatwildrice 1083 for Menomini Indians Hits
— , wild-rice death feast of 10H1-10C2 —, on Menomini use of wild rice 1WS
— , property-right of, in wild rice 1073 — , on popular synonym for wild rice KfJ3
— , wild-rice moon of 1089 —, on Dakota use of wild rice HUH
POTTERY, ancient, historic value of te3ti- — , on Dakota gathering wild rice 1081
mony of 604 —, on Dakota eating wild rice 1083
— urns, in mounds at Santa Rita 678-885 — , time of year Dakota consume wild
POWELL, MAJOR, J. W., on California rice 1087
number names 871 — , on location of Huron Indians in Wis-
— , on Huchnom numerals 912 consin 1055
—, on law of activital similarities 827 RAIN, prominent in Flute ceremony Imfi
—, American linguistic stocks of, cited .- 933 RAIN CLAN, member of Patki group 596
— , on mystical numbers. 835 — SYMBOL, made of kernels of corn 993-994
— , on word Nahnatl 866 — , of Macilenya altar 989
POWERS, STEPHEN, on California num- — , at Mishongnovi Cakwalenya altar 993
her names 871 — , at Mishongnovi Flute altar 991
— , on geographic extent of quinary- RAIN-CLOUD CLAN, associated with Piba
vigesimal system 934 clan 601
POYI, on advent of clans at Walpi 585 | RAIN CLOUDS, depicted on Walpi Snake
PRIMITIVE NUMBERS, by WJMcGee.. 821-851 altar ... 9S3
PRIMITI VE PEOPLE, importance of imme RAMA method of forming numbers His
diate study of 1056 RAMIREZ, JOSE FERNANDO, on Nahoas
PRODUCTION of wild rice 1056-1079 counting 876
PROPERTY-RIO HT in wild rice 1072-1073 RAU, DR CHARLES, on Palenque Tablet. ~H
PROVANCHER, ABBE L., on popular syu- — , reference to restoration of Tablet of
onym for wild rice 1023 the Sun, by 739
Psix, meaning of 1025 RED CEUAK KIVEK, wild rice in 1034
PCTEBLO ARCHITECTURE, influence of ag- RED RIVER OF THE NORTH, system of,
ricultureon 640,643 wildricein 11135
— , influence of war raids on 641 REED CLAN, see PAKAB CLAN.
— , Hopi 579-583 RELATIONS DBS JKSUITES, on location of
— REGION, ancient extent of 639 Winnebago 1052
— RUINS, cause of distribution of 639-640 — , on location of Potawatomi 1063
— , BANADO, home of Kokop clan 604 — , on duck at Green bay 1099
PUMA CLAN, associated with Snake- Ante- — , on Dakota use of wild rice 1046
lope societies at Walpi 624 | — , on Ottawa tying wild rice 1059
PuS( i, home of Kokop clan 604 j — , on Ottawa gathering wild rice. 1063
— , home of Hano clans 614 — , on Ottawa thrashing wild rice 10B8
PUPULUCA, number names of 863,873,931 I — , on Ottawa storing wild rice in birch-
PfTCE, Hopi Horn and Flute clan chief, bark boxes 1072
referenceto 579 — , on Maskotin eating wild rice 1IK>
PITKoS, wooden image of 966 — , on popular synonym lor wild rice ... li)23
PBCKOXHOYA, Hopi war god 589 — , on Indian population in wild-rice dis
QUATERNARY CONCEPT, among primitive trict llor
people 834-8-'Vi RKLICIOUS SOCIETIES, from Toknnahi. tai-IKj
QUARTERN AK Y-^UIXAHY system, among — , from Palatkwabi is.ti iWi
primitive people 848,850 — , at Walpi it.'-.' if ill
QUARTERS, CULT of 834,845-846 REHEDOS, of Cakwalenya altar '.'"1 m:
QUET/AU'OATi. (Mexican god of air), — , of Macilenya altar »".«
painting of, on wall in .Santa Rita — "at Shipaulovi altar !C.i5
mound iHiri.iitts.6~t.«7ii RESERVOI us. underground rock-hewn. at
QUEVEDO, A. LAFONE, on Tabo numera- Santa Rita liHl-692
tion 838 RICE, CLEANED, chemical compo-i lion of . 1IIH2
QU'ICHE, number names of 863.H64 RICHARDSON, JOHN, on destruction of
QUICHE-CAKI HiyuKi. days, list of 8117 wild rice by caterpillars 111)0
ETH. ANN. HI]
INDEX
1155
Paste Rio<;s, STEPHEN RETI-HX, on meaning of
Dakota words 1061
RIGHT-HANDEDNESS, among primitive
people 845-846
RITI-ALS, of East mesa (31-633
— , Hopi, growth of 578
— , of Hano 632-633
— , of Sichumovi. 633
— ,of Walpi (131-632
Ri VKHS. names of, influence of wild rice
on 1118-1134
RODMAN, Capt. N. D., on Ojibwa tying
wild rice ._ 1058
— , on winnowing wild rice. 1070
— , on amounts of wild rice harvested 1077
— , on drowning of wild rice 1099
ROLFS, P. H., on wild rice in Florida 1029
ROSNY, LEON DE, on Maya numerals .. 891,892 — , photograph of bas-relief de Bernoulli
by, cited 775
ROTH, H. LING, on Tasmanian number
concepts _ 833
ROTH, W. E., on Australian binary con- cept 848
— , on Australian numeration 834
R IYCE, C. C., on forced migrations of
Winnebago 1052
Rrixs OF ARIZONA, architectural char- acteristics of ancient 577
Rr.MsKY, W. E., on absence of wild rice in
West Virginia 1033
RrssiA, wild rice in 1037
RYE, chemical composition of 1083
SAI.MERON, MARCOS, on Mame numer- als 903-904
— , on Mame number names 864
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, number names
from 881
SA CLAN, census of 617,622
SAND MOUNDS at altars, see also MtUYiN- WC 990,991
— pictures at Hopi altars 966, 968, »K2. '.m.'i
— CLAN, same as Nan elan 615,616,620
— , see TCw A CLAN.
SANTA RITA (Honduras), mounds at 661
SANTO DOMINGO, same as Tukwi. SACK, see Indians in wild-rice district... 1050 — , tribalnamesfor,anduieaningol'same. 1050 — , population of 1108,111)!), 1110
— AND Fox, coalition of tribes, history
and migrations 1050-1051
— , population of, consuming wild rice... 1051
SATENEJA. mounds at 69CN>91
SAUNDEHS, D. W., on wild rice in South
Dakota 1032
SAIM.TEAUX, origin and migrations
of 1USI-1040
HAY UK, Lucn-s E., on Claviceps pur-
pnrea 1(127
Si iiiicii.cKAFT, HEXHY ROWE, on the
cause of Maskotin migration - 1054
— , on meaning of Wiunebago tribal name.
1051-1052 — , on popular synonym for wild rice . litti, 1023
. on wild rice in Minnesota river 1055
— , on wild rice in Wisconsin and Minne- sota .. - I'M
Page
SCHOOLCRAFT, HENRY RowE, on influ- ence of wild rice on geographic nomen- clature Hl«, 1117, 1120, 1123
— , on "folle avoine country" 1042
— , wild rice harvesting illustrations.
reference to 1057
— , on Indian population in 1778 1109
— , on Dakota use of wild rice 1046-1047
— , on Dakota mealtime 1087
— , on Menoinini use of wild rice 1049
— , on migrations from wild-rice district. 1111
— , on Ojibwa tying wild rice 1058
— , on storing wild rice in bags _ 1072
— ,on wild rice thrashing holes in Wis- consin 1067
— , on value of wild-rice district to In- dians 1038
— ,onwild rice as Indian food 1084
— , on property-right in wild rice 1073
— .onOjibwa wild -rice moon. 1089
— , on dependence of fur trade on wild
rice 1102,1104
— , on birds destructive to wild rice 1027
SCIENCE, modern, stepping-stones to .. 825,826 SCOTT, PROF. WM. A., acknowledg- ments to 1019
SECTIONS OF COUNTRY, named from wild
rice 1116
SEI.EU, DR ED., on Dresden codex 799
— , on early Central American day names 808 — , on importance of Ahau and Mayan
time counts 816
— ,on Mayan year of 360 days 748
SELKIRK, LORD, on wild rice in water
system of Red River of the North 1035
SF.MINOLE, amounts of wild rice har- vested by 1075-1078
SENARY CONCEPT, among primitive
people 835,836
SENARY-SEPTENARY SYSTEM, among
primitive people 842,848
SENECA, population of, in 1822 1110
—.amounts of wild rice harvested by — 1075 SKHPENT, effigy of, in Santa Rita mound. 689 — HEAD, painting of, on wall in Santa
Rita mound 667
! SETON-THOMPSON, ERNEST, on tragic
deathof animals 843
SEYMOUR, E. S., on wild rice in Lake of
the Woods 1035
— , on Ojibwa tying wild rice 1059
— , on Ojibwa gathering wild rice 1062
— , on Ojibwa curing wild rice 1065
— , on Ojibwa thrashing wild rice 1067
— , on use of birch-bark winnowing fans. . 1071
SM A WNEK, population of 1108. 1109, 1110
SHEA, JOHN GILMAKY, on migrations of
the Huron 1055
— , on curing wild rice 1065
— ,on thrashing wild rice 1068
— , on wild rice eaten with grease 1084 •
— , on Dakota eating wild rice 1085
SHIMEK. B., on wild rice in Iowa 1030
SHIPAULOVI, location and settlement of,
in Hopi country- 579-580
FI.TTF. ALTAHS, comparison of. with those of Mishongnovi swt '.i%
1156
INDEX
[KTH. ANN. Ill
SHIPATLOVI, SNAKE DANCK at, in isim,
reference to 964
SIIIISIIOXEAX method of counting 87SI
—.numbers of 868-870, 876, 8TS. l«t
Sin Nupovi, location of,m Hopi country 5T9 — , SNAKK DANCE of, in 18«6, reference to. 964
SIBAHI, site of old Patki pueblo 597
SIII;:KIA, wild rice in 1087
SICIIUMOVI, component clans of 582-584
— , detached houses in 648-450
— , founded by Asa women .- 611
— , location and settlement of, in Hopi
country _ 579-580
—, population of, by clans 614
— PUEBLO, language and culture of : 633
— RITUAL St2
SIKYABOTIMA, Flute courier at Walpi...
11)01-1004
SIKYAHONAUWC, man of Tilwa clan 596
SIKYAOWATCOMO, rocky eminence near
old Hano pueblo 615
SIKYATKI, founding of 586
— POTTERY, value of testimony of 604
— PUEBLO, destruction of 580
SILKTZ AGENCY INDIANS, standard of
lifeof 1079
SIMEON, REMI, on Nahuatl number
names 866,883
SI.MILATON (Honduras) method of form- ing numbers 916
SINACANTAN, numbers of 881,931
SIOKI, home of Asa clan 610
SIOUAN LANGUAGE, influence of, on geo- graphic nomenclature 1115
— STOCK, plains Indians 1043-1044
Sioux, meaning of name 1039
SKIN BAGS, for storing wild rice 1072
SMITH, JOHN, on popular synonym for
wild rice 1032
— , on wild rice planted at Lincolnshire.. 1037
SNAKE ALTAR, characteristics of. 966
SNAKE-ANTELOPE SOCIETIES, original
composition and development of .... 624-635 SNAKE CLAN, see Tcl'A CLAN. — , prominence of, in Snake dance 965
— and Snake society, relationship of . 1006-1007
— DANCE, duration of 964
—.meaning of 1008
— , at Uishongnovi, in 1897 964-976
— , at Walpi, in 1897 976-985
— , the most primitive form of . . 986
SNAKE AND FLUTE KITES, gods in 1009-1011
— , needs of worshiper in1 1009-1011
SNAKE-HUNTING implements 970
SNAKE PEOPLE, in Tusayan 652
— PRIESTS, same as Tciiwimpkia 623-634
— , functions of "carrier," "hugger,"and
"gatherer" 975
— -, parts played by, in Antelope and Snake dance 975-976
— RITES, interpretation of 1009-1011
— BOCIETY kiva, at Mishongnovi 986
— , census of 625
— YOUTH AND WOMAN 1008
— WASHING, motive for 973
— WHIPS, in Snake ceremonies 969,!»7^,!C:,
SNAKES, ceremony of washing 870-973
Page s \ A K KS for Snake dance, collection of ... Wifi
— , how carried by Snake priests 1C". '.O;
SNOW PEOPLE, in Tusayan I'M
SOBAIPURI, trilx'of, Apache raid on .Vis
SONGS, Flute, at Walpi KKK 1003
SONOHAN, number names of «>
SORROW-MAKING I'l.AX, see TUBIC CLAN.
SOUTHERN PAIUTE. numbers of «2!,!«i
Sowi CLAN, associated with Piba clan . . . Kill
SOWING WILD HICE 1057
— , early Ojibwa traditions of 1057-1058
SoYALUNA.or Winter-solstice ceremony. 5% SPANIARDS, influence of, on removal of
old Walpi 580-581
— , where they first found Walpi 580
SPANISH PA ORES, influence of, on Hopi. 581-582 SPENCER, HERBERT F., on Australian in- termarrying groups 836
SPITTLE, meaning of ejecting, at Snake
dance 976
SPRINGS, importance of, in Hopi-settle-
ment ceremonials 592
SQUASH CLAN, see PATUN CLAN. SQUIEH.EPHRIAM GEORGE, on Nagranda
numerals 912
STCHOIX RIVER, wild rice in 1034
ST Louis (MINNESOTA) RIVER system,
wild rice in 1035
STANDARD BEARERS, description of 998
STANDARD OF LIFE, of Indian tribes 1078-1079
STEPH EN, A. M., acknowledgment to .... !is7
— , on advent of clans at Walpi 585
— , on determination of Hopi clans 651
— , reference to _ 578
— , on traditions revealing early Hopi con- ditions 648
— , on migrations of Pakab clans 608
STEPHENS, JOHN L., on bas-reliefs at
Labphak 672
— , on bas-reliefs at Palenque 673
— , on rock-hewn reservoirs at Uxmal 692
STEVENSON Mrs MATILDA COXE, mem- oir of, referred to 971
— , reference to 1182
STICKNEY, GARDNER P., wild rice har- vesting illustration, published by 1057
— , acknowledgments to 1105
STOLL, DR OTTO, on Aguacateca and other
numerals above ten 905
— , on Cakchikel numerals 899
— , cited on Cakchicinel language by Good- man 809
— , on formation of Mayan number
names si 15
— , on Huastica numeral system 894
— , on Ixil numerals 804-905
— , on Maine number names 864
— , on old and new Mayan numeral sys- tems MI)
— , on names of numbers in Mayan dia- lects .'. sill siti
— , on Pipil numiier names stir
— , on Pokonchi numerals 901
— , on Tzotzil and other numerals 906
— , on Zoquean number names H73
STORING WILD HICE 1071-1072
— , mechanical means employed in 1072
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1157
Page
STORING WILD JIICE, reasons for 1071-1072
STOH.MS, destructive to wild rice 1027,1100
STRAWBERRIES, chemical composition of 1081 STI'AHT, ROBERT, on dependence of fur
trade on aboriginal production 1104
STUNTZ, A. C., on tying wild rice 1058
— , on Ojibwa curing wild rice 1066
— , 011 thrashing wild rice by treading — 1068
STURGEON, chemical composition of 1081
SUBINA, number names of 863
SUFFIXES, use of, in Mayan number
names... 864-865
SULLIVAN, JEREMIAH, reference to. 609
SUMAIKOLIS, Cult, and priests of 631
SUMO (Honduras) method of forming
numbers .. 914-915
— (Nicaragua) method of forming numer- als.. 915
SUN, prominent in Flute ceremony _ 1005
SUN EM ULEM, bearer of, description of.. 998
SUN, TABLET OF THE •. 761-765
— , initial series of, inscriptions of.. 801
— , TEMPLE OF THE, inscriptions found in. 732 SUNOITIWA, member of Asa clan, cited.. 598
SUPELA, Snake priest at Walpi 977
SWASTIKA, a primitive number symbol. 840-841 SYMBOLISM, use of, in Snake and Flute
rites.. 1010-1011
TABASCO, ruins of, inscription of — 806
TABLET OF THE CROSS 733-761
— , initial series of, inscriptions of 800
TABLET OF THE FOLIATED CROSS 765-771
— , initial series of, inscriptions of 801
TABLET OF THE SUN — 761-765
— , initial series of, inscriptions of 801
TABO (BABBIT) CLAN, advent of, at
Walpi 585
— , member of Patki group 596
— , associated with Piba clan U01
TABO-PIBA GROUP, component clans of.. 583
— , advent of, at Walpi. 585
TAIOWA, statuette of, at Shipaulovi
altar 995
TAKHTAM, numbers of 870,923,930
TANNER, EDWARD, on wild rice in Fox
river 1034
— , on Ojibwa tying wild rice 1058
— , on Ojibwa gathering wild rice 1061
— , on Ojibwa curing wild rice 1085
— , on Ojibwa thrashing wild rice 1067
— , on Ojibwa winnowing wild rice 1071
— , on Ojibwa storing wild rice 1072
— , on Ojibwa use of wild rice in Minne- sota 1035
— , on amounts of wild rice harvested by
Ojibwa 1074
— . on time of year when Ojibwa con- sume wild rice - 1087
TANNKR, JOHN, ou synonym for Menom-
ini 1048
— , on Indian thanksgiving feasts 1091
— , on Ottawa wild-rice moon 1089
— , on dependence of fur traders on wild
rice 1103
TANO, migrations of 611
— CLAN compulsory migrations of 605-006
1!) ETH, PT 2—01 39
Page TANSY-MUSTARD CLAN, see ASA CLAN.
TA POLO, reference to 001
TARAHUMARI method of counting 868,
878, 879, 911, 922,92tf TAHASCAN or Miehoauaii, numbers of ... 874,
978,880,809-818,981
TXTXTL, number names of.- N71
TATAUKYAMC, religious society at Walpi,
source and census of 623,<»28
TATCUKTO, ancient order of priests 631
TCAKWAINA CLAN, See ASA CLAN.
— , MASK, of Asa clan 612
TcAKWAiNAKi,hoine of Asa clan lilO
TCAMAHIA (flat stone implements), in
Walpi Snake dance 982
— (mythic) HOPI CLAN, mentioned 589
TCEWADI, original home of Hano clans. . 614 TcosHONiwO (Tcino), Antelope priest,
description and functions bf 984,985
— , prominent Snake priest 977
TCUA(SNAKE)CLAN, advent of, at Walpi 585-588 TcCA GROUP, component clans of 582
— CLANS, census of 587-588
— , original home and early migrations
of 587-590
TctlAMANA, ancestress of Snake clan 965
Tct'BKWiTCALOBi, see JETTIPEHIKA. Tct'BWiMPKiA, a religious society from
Tokonabi, at Walpi 623-U24
TCUKUBI, founded by Patun clan 626
— , foundation of 596
— , settlementof 595
TCUKUWIMPKIYASCULT 631
i TcCwiMPKiA, a religious society from
Tokonabi, at Walpi 63MK4
TEJON PASS, numbers of 930
TELLECHEA, MIGUEL, on Tarahumari
numerals 911
TEMPLE OF THE CROSS, at Paleuque, bas
reliefs at 673
— , at Paleuque, figure on, compared with
oneat SantaEita 668
TEMPLE OF INSCRIPTIONS 771-775
— . initial series of, inscriptions of 801
TEMPLE, MOUND-COVERED, at, Santa Rita,
builders of 670-673
— , destroyers of. 673-675
— , probable date of building 676-677
TEN(!K CLAN, census of 619.822
TEPEHUAN, numbers of 808.929
TERNARY CONCEPT, among primitive peo- ple 847-«48
TERRAVA, numbers of 882.931
TETSOGI, speaks same language as Hano
clans 614
TEWA CLAN, allied with Asa clan against
thellte 610
— , compulsory migration of 605-608
THIEL, on number naimes of Terrava 882
THOMAS, DR CYRUS, on Hai-it numera- tion 838
— , on Mayan calendar periods 675
— , Mayan calendar systems, by 69:8-819
— , on Mayan day symbols 071
— , numeral systems of Mexico and Cen- tral America, by 85:i-955
1158
INDEX
[ETH. ANN 1!)
Page THOUGHT, PRIMITIVE, characteristics of
BH 888
TIIK \SHIXI; WILD HICK, mechanical
means employed in 11)70
by Hailing 1069
— by rhurndashcr-like stick 1088-1(169
— by rubbing, bruising, and shaking . 1069-1070
— bytreading 1067-1068
— , supporting sticks used during 1067, 1069
— HOLES, for wild rice 1067-1069
— MACHINE, first form of 1086-1067
THWAITES, REUBEN GOLD, acknowledg- ments to... 1020
-. on wild rice in Fox river 1034
THiKiig. effigiesof, in Santa Rita mounds.
680,684,687
TIKAL INSCRIPTIONS 775-776
TIMK UNITS, Mayan, employed in count- ing 860
— SERIES, in the codices and inscriptions. 715-
T'.n
TIPOM on altars 966
— , at Mishongnovi Flute altar 989
— , as "mother," probable meaning of 1005
— , renewal of Flute 1003-1005
— , at Walpi, importance of, called
"mother" 980
— . use and importance of, in Snake
dance 980
TOBACCO CLAN, set PIBA CLAN.
— , same as Sa clan 615-617
ToniKHAK, numbers of 870, 876, iBUMO
TOHO CLAN, relations with Tciia clan . . 588-590 TOKOAXU (HOPI) CLAN, reference to — 583 TOKOXAKI (Southern Utah), clans from. 587-
594
— , pueblo of, referred to 586
— , religious societies from, at Walpi. . 623-634 TOKKVA, march of Flute society to the
pueblo of 999-1000
TORRES STRAITS, people of, number
names of 877
TOTONACA method of forming numbers
above ten. 911,931
—.kingdom of 598
TOUMEY, J. W., on absence of wild rice
in Arizona 1039
TRACY, S. M., on wild rice in Missis- sippi 1030
TRADITIONS, Hopi, ignorance of, by
young tribesmen ... 579
— , Indian, historic value of 1039
TKADITIONISTS, Hopi, integrity and reli- ability of 579
TKAII.L, CATHERINE PARK, on appear- ance of wild-rice plant 1025
— , on gathering wild rice 1063
— , on wild rice eaten with venison 10H4
TRKI. EASE, WILLIAM, on Entyloina cras-
tophilnm 1027
TKIKE. meaning of number words in 879
method of forming numbers 872, !««. '.««>
TIIOAXO CODEX, on Cauac day symbol
from 671
-.cited 809,810
— , dominical days of Tnr,
TROUT (LAKE), chemical composition of _ 1082
Page
TsCHUIUOHl method of forming num- bers above ten 913
TUIUCCLAN 5S3
TUCANO, probably same as Totouteac . 599 TURCZAXINOW, on scientific synonym for
wild rice 1021
TURNER, PROF. FREDERICK J., acknowl- edgments to 1019
TURXOA, Flute chief at Walpi 1001-1004
TUKWI, home of Asa clan 610
TURTLES, effigies of, in Santa Rita
mounds ii,sn nsl
TUTTLE, A. H., on wild rice in Virginia . 1033 TUSAYAX CLANS, localization of, by Cos- mos Mindeleff 635-65:1
TUSAYAN MIGRATION TRADITIONS, by
Dr Jesse Walter Fewkes 573-63:)
TUSAYAN SNAKE AND FLUTE CEREMO- NIES, by Dr Jesse Walter Fewkes .. 957-1011 Tt'wA (SAND) CLAN, advent of, at Walpi. 5x5
— , member of Patki group 596
TOWA-Kt'Kl'Tc i -LAX, census of 603
— GROUP, component clans of 583
— , advent of, at Walpi 585
TdWAXACAiu, home of Hanani clans.. . 606 TUWAPONTUMSI, "Earth-altar woman" . 596
TYING WILD RICE, bast use in 1058-1081
— , mechanical means employed in 1061
— , reasons for 1058,1059
TZENTAL, days, list of S07
—. number names of KtK.sitl
TZOTZIL, number names of 863,863,906
UHLE, ADOLPH, on Bribi numerals 919
UMPQU A, amounts of wild rice harvested 1076 US HA, ancient Hano spring on East
mesa 615
UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM,
Mayan codices in 7(10
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, on Ma yan inscriptions in, and acknowledg- ment to 700
UPHAM, WARREN, on wild rice in Minne- sota and Wisconsin 1035. \(M
VRICOECHEA, E.,on Chibcha numerals .. HI*
Usi'AXTEcA, number names of 862
UTE. on defeat of, by Tewa 616
— , on removal of old Walpi 580
— , on influence of, on Pueblo architec- ture 641
UTCKVACA, site of old Patki pueblo 597
USTILACO ESCULENTA, destruction of
wild rice by 1027
VASEY, Dr GEORGE, on wild rice in Si- beria IU17
VATICAN CODEX, number and day sym- bols from «37.9:i8.943 !U4,!ilT '.US
VEHWYST, CHRYSOSTUM, on influence <>i wild rice on geographic nomenclature- 1119
— , on the Assiniboin 1055
— , on meaning of Ojibwa words 1061
— , on Ojibwa eating wild rice 1085
VEYTIA, MARIANO FERNANDEZ D'EciiE- VERHIA Y, on early Toltec migration . 678
—, on Mexican calendar system !i:r>
VICKYTA, number names of 8.S2.OT1
VKJESIMM. SYSTDM, geographic extent of .. 859.935
r
ETH. ANN. 19]
INDEX
1159
Page
VIGESIMAL SYSTEM, employed by Mexi- can and Mayan peoples 921, 9*4
— , origin and spread of 926,937,938
VILLAGE, PUEBLO, method of buildingup 644
VILLAGES, INDIAN, location of — 1117
WALPI, advent of Patufi clans at 595
— , Antelope altar at 980
— , building of, by advent of numerous
clans 585-588
— , causes of removal from 580-581
—.component clans of _ 582-584
— , chronologic sequence of advent of
clansat 585-586
— , date of founding modern 587
— , Flnte ceremony at, in 1896 1000-1(105
— , location and settlement of, in Hopi
country 579
— , population of, by clans 614
— , pueblo, origin, and culture of 633
— , religious societies at 622-630
— RITUAL 631-633
— , Snake dance at, in 1891,1893, reference
to 964
— , Snake dance at, in 1897 976-985
— , OLD, sites of 580-581
WAR RAIDS, influence of, on Pueblo
architecture 641
WARDEN, on influence of wild rice on
geographic nomenclature 1132
WARREN, WILLIAM W., on meaning of
Sauk and Fox tribal names ._ 1050
— , on separation of Assiniboin from their
Siouan kinsmen 1054
— , on traditional history of O.iibwa, Pota-
watomi, and Ottawa 1088-1039
— , on wild rice in Mille Lacs 1035-1036
— , on Ojibwa use of wild rice 1042
— , on time of year when Ojibwa consume
wildrice 1088
— , on influence of wild rice on geographic
nomenclature 1116,1120
WAHRIOH, description of man to repre- sent, in Flute ceremony 999
WARRIORS, paintings of, on wall in Santa
Rita mound 665-667
WASHING THE SNAKES 977-978
WATCHANDIES, number names of 877
WATEH, high, destruction of wild rice by. 102",
1099, 1100
WATERFOWL, destructive to wild rice . . . 1026 WATER-HOUSE CLAN, associated with
Pibaclan 601
WATER PEOPLE, arrival of. at Tusayan.. 652 WEA (Ouachtenons).populationof in!764. 1108
WEH E. on site of Katcina kiva 607
WKMIIO.K'I, the mythic personage who
first gave wild rice to the Ojibwa . 1093-1094 WESTERN Jou RNA L, on wild rice in water
system of Red River of the North KKK
WHEAT.chemical composition of 1082
WHEELER, C.F., on wild rice in Michigan 1030 WHIPS, see SNAKE wm rs. WHITE-FISH, whole, chemical composi- tion of 1082
WHITE HOMINY, commercial, chemical composition of . 10K1
Page WHITK MAN, dependence of, on wild
rice 1101-1105
WHITES, aa spectators, influence of, on
Snake dance - 978
WHOHTELHERHIES, chemical composition
of.. 1081
Wi ANDOTS, population of 1108, 1109. 1 1 10
WIGWAMS, see CEDAR BARK, BIRCH
BARK; also list of illustrations 1017
WIHINACHT. number names of 870
WIKI, Antelope priest, description of .-. 984
— , functions of 977
— , Hopi Snake clan chief, reference to ... 579
Wi KWALIOBI-KI VA, mention of Mil
WIKYATIWA, Antelope priest, descrip- tion and function of 985
— , on advent of clans at Walpi 585
— (Hopi, SNAKE) CLAN chief, reference
to 579
WILD RICE, botany of KK1
— , scientific description of 1025
— , popular description of 1025
— , scientific synonyms for 1031
— , popular synonyms for 1023-1024
— , natural enemies of KeJii
— , general habitat of 1028
— , habitat of , by States 1028-KB3
— , habitat of.in "wild-rice district". 1033-1031! — , foreign habitat of 1036-1037
— in Winnebago tribal mythology 1091
— in Menomini tribal organization - . - 1090-1093
- in Potawatomi tribal mythology .. 1091-1093
— in Ojibwa tradition 1057-1058,1093-1095
— , reasons for first use of 1113-1114
— , sowing of 1057-1058
—.tying of 1058-1061
— , gathering of 1061-1064
—.curing of 1084-1066
— , thrashing of 1066-1070
— , winnowing of 1070-1071
— , storing of - 1071-1073
— , property -right in 1072-1073
— . amounts of, harvested 1073-1079
— , nutrition of 1080-1083
- cooked for food 1083-1086,1091
— , periods of its consumption ... 1086-1088
— feast, at harvest time 1091
— harvest, religious observances con- nected with 1091
— , social and economic interpretations of, in its influence on the Indian .... 108H-1 114
— , value of, per bushel 1078
— , importance of, to Indian 1096
1097, 10B8, 1100-1101
— , weight of, per bushel 1075
— , importance of, to fur trade 1101-1104
-, reliability of crop of 1095, 1099-1101 . 11H
— , dependence of white man on 1101-1105
— villages, Dakota 1045, 1040. lot:
- villages, Ojibwa 10413
— , influence of, on geographic nomencla- ture 1042,1115-1126
— DISTRICT, Indian population in 1106-1114
— planted in England 1037
WILD KICK GATHERERS of the Upper
Lakes, by Dr Albert Ernest Jenks . 1013-1137
1160
INDKX
[ETH. ANN. 19
Page WILLIAMS, THOMAS A., on valne of duck
to Indians 1098
WILLIAMSON, JOHN P., on Dakota gath- ering wild rice 1062
— , on Dakota tying wild rice -• 1058
— . on Dakota thrashing wild rice 1069
— , on Dakota use of wild rice 1047
Wii.soN, EDWARD F., on 'meaning of
ojibwa words 1081
—, on meaning and use of " meno " 1024
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1023
— , on Ojibwa wild-rice moon 1089
WILSON, H. V., on wild rice in North
Carolina 1031
WILSON, on the swastika 840
WIXHA, home of Katcina clan '. 607
WINIMA, home of Calako 612
W i x N EBAGO, see Indians in wild-rice dis- trict 1051
— , first historic mention of 1052
— , tribal names, history, migrations, and
settlement of 1051-1053
— , population of 1108,1109,1110
— , on popular synonym for wild rice . . - - lid
— cure wild rice 1065
— thrash wild rice by nailing 1089
— , population of, consuming wild rice .. 1053
WINNIPEG water system, wild rice in ... 1035
WINNOWING wild rice 1070-1071
— , mechanical means used in 1071
WIXSHIP. Q. PARKER, onCoronado 599
WIXCTA, (FLUTE) CHIEF, description of,
and renewing of tiponi by 1003-101 H
WISCONSIN FUR TRADE ACCOUNTS, on
popular synonym forwild rice 1023
Wis. HIST. COLLS., on duck in Green bay. low*
— , on popular synonym for wild rice 1023
— , on dependence of fur traders on wild
rice 1103
— , on Menomini population 1049
— , on synonymsfor Menomini Indians. . . HUH
— , on Ottawa gathering wild rice Wt\
— , on Ojibwa eating wild rice 1085
Wis. HIST. Soc. Ms. COLL., on importance
of wild rice to the Indian... . HM6
Page
WISCONSIN INDIANS (Ouisconsins), pop- ulation of , in!764 1108
WISCONSIN RIVEH. wild rice in 1034
WOLF RIVER, wild rice in 1034
WOLL, PROF. F. W., acknowledgments
to 1020
— , on chemical composition of wild rice . 1080-
1082
WOMAN, man's first thrashing machine . 1066-
1067
WOMEN, members of Snake society 979
WOODWARD, R. S., on pure mathemat- ics 827
WOOTON, E. O-, on absence of wild ri<v
in New Mexico 1031
WUKOANU. (Hopi) CLAN, reference to . 583
WUKOKI PUEKLO, by whom built 589
WUKOPAKABI, home of Hano clans 6H
HTAGAMI, see Fox INDIANS. Wt'wI'Tci.MTr, religious society at Wai
pi, source and census of iWi.628
XINCAN, number names 881
YAKIMA, amounts of wild rice harvested
by 1075
YAO.UIS method of. forming numbers
above ten 909
YEAR. MAYAN, various interpretations
of 747-748
YET'TRIPIH, number names of 871
YMOLIXA, Lns DE NKVE, on formation
of Othomi numerals 909
— , on Othomi aununierals 909
— , on Othomi annumbers X7:i
— , on Othomi number names 873
YUCATAN, ruins of, inscriptions of 808
—.bas-relief sat 672
ZAPOTEC method of forming numerals
above ten 885-888
—.numbers of 872,930
7.I/.AMA AQUATICA 1021
— MILIACEA 1022
ZOO.UE, formation of number words in ... 873-
874,880,907,930
ZUNI, see SlOKl 610
ZUNI CALAKO, came from Minima 612
o
\
i
W